S4 E21 - Greatest Championship Rivalries over the Generations
Game 1 of the NBA Finals is in the books — Brunson left the court injured, came back and took over the fourth quarter, and Mark the Millennial barely survived. In Season 4, Episode 22, the guys break down a tense Game 1 Knicks-Spurs reaction, debate what makes Wembanyama the most terrifying defensive force anyone has ever seen, and then go deep on the greatest championship rivalries across every sport — by generation.
🏀 Knicks-Spurs Game 1 ReactionMark watched in total silence. No phone. No texts. The Knicks needed him focused and he delivered. Brunson was hurt twice, sat to open the fourth quarter, then came back to close it out. Cap's halftime message to the bench — "just keep playing defense, the offense will get there" — had Mark actually believing. De'Aaron Fox was off. Champagnie hit threes. Josh Hart went right at Wemby in the first quarter. It was everything a Game 1 should be.
🏀 Wembanyama — The Most Disruptive Defender Ever?Steve makes the comparison to Gretzky: one player who changes everything around him, except Wemby does it on defense. Jonathan breaks it down analytically — Manute Bol and Mark Eaton were walls, Olajuwon had the lateral movement. Wemby has both, at 7'4", and can hit a 28-footer like it's a free throw. The guys float a new stat: "altered shots." Because blocking isn't even the half of it.
🏆 Greatest Championship Rivalries — By Generation
Boomer Steve: Lakers-Celtics in the '80s. Magic vs. Bird. McHale vs. Worthy. Same rosters, same hatred, year after year. Familiarity breeds contempt — and those games had it all.
Gen X Jonathan: The 76ers' fo-fo-fo (actually 4-1) in 1983 — Moses Malone destroying the Lakers on the boards. Then the Bulls-Pistons evolution: the Jordan Rules, the Bad Boys, Isiah walking off without handshakes, and then Jordan finally breaking through.
Millennial Mark: The 2004 Pistons over the Kobe-Shaq-Malone-Payton Lakers. No superstar. Just Chauncey, Rip, Tayshaun, and both Wallaces playing perfect team basketball. 4-1. Nobody saw it coming.
⚾ The Yankees-Royals ALCS: Baseball's Best Rivalry Nobody Talks About1976, 1977, 1978, 1980 — the Royals couldn't get past the Yankees. Hal McRae hip-checking Willie Randolph. Graig Nettles kicking George Brett in the head. Whitey Herzog vs. Billy Martin. A flyover state team that had no business hanging with the Yankees every October — and nearly beat them every time.
⚾ More World Series Deep Dives
* 1975 Reds-Red Sox: Carlton Fisk's home run, the Big Red Machine, Sparky Anderson from Ventura County, and genuine angst in Boston
* 1986 Mets-Red Sox: The Buckner game, the narrative collision of two cursed franchises, and Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry as the last homegrown core of a team built from castoffs
* 1997 Marlins-Indians: The guys name nearly every player on both rosters from memory — Vizquel, Thome, Manny, Jose Mesa, Sheffield, Liván Hernández, Bobby Bonilla's 30 errors that didn't matter
* 2016 Cubs-Indians: Two droughts, one Game 7, and the only World Series in recent memory that felt like a movie
🏈 Why Conference Championships Have More Drama Than Super Bowls49ers-Cowboys. Bills-Chiefs. Steelers-Oilers. Jonathan makes the case that the best rivalries happen before the championship, not in it. Steve brings up Earl Campbell and Bum Phillips. Mark agrees but won't fully let go of the Finals argument.
Also: Robert Horry's agent is a genius. Claude Lemieux's legacy. The Detroit Red Wings-Colorado Avalanche "Unrivaled" documentary. And why modern players all like each other too much for real rivalries to exist anymore.
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Go Knicks. Steve hopes it goes seven. Mark may not survive seven.
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