Chaplin
Better off silent
I've got to disagree, mostly because Malone was SUCH a better player than Amare. He was a superior rebounder, much superior passer and an All-Defense player... all areas where Amare is poor to just plan bad. It's the discrepency between these two players which is what made that combo a lot better than ours IMO, because with Stockton and Nash, like you said, it's probably a wash, with Nash's offense being superior to Nash, but Stockton makes up for that with his incredibly stout D (5 time 2nd Team All-Defense) versus Nash's absolutely horrific D.
Totally understand what you're saying. I just don't think the gap is as large as you do, that's all.
And therein lies the problem in comparing the two sets of superstars is our combo was really one-dimensional - ALL OFFENSE, while the Jazz two superstars were All-EVERYTHING. They could both pass, they could both play offense, they could both play defense and ultimately, they both propelled their team to at least an NBA Finals... or two, whereas our guys never even sniffed a Game 7 in the WCF.
Again, there are several factors against comparing the two sets of stars. One is the state of the NBA. Both Malone and Stockton were incredibly dirty players. I loved Stockton, thought he was terrific, but he was dirty. Not Bruce Bowen dirty, but dirty enough. Both of them wouldn't get away with most of the stuff they did back then that made then good defensive players. Could Malone be a good defender without throwing his elbows all the time? Could Stockton without tripping people? Tough to know. Two, the potency of their two-man game is VERY close. Nash and Amare can't play defense, sure, but their two-man game is just as good as Malone and Stockton's was. Is that enough to make a valid comparison? Maybe not, and in the end, is it worth comparing the two sets? Probably not also.
IMO there is such a huge gap between the NBA in the early- to mid-nineties and the NBA of today. It's quite interesting, and I think in all the major sports, the NBA showed the biggest change in a 15-year span. Chris Bosh wouldn't have done well against Malone either. The only player in the entire league right now that could have held is own with Malone is probably Dwight Howard. Most big men in the league are pretty soft, including Amare. David Lee is incredibly soft and yet he's considered a power forward many people covet (especially on this board). Malone didn't have to worry about foul trouble because nobody called him for anything.