NBA Analyst Ranks Blazers' Backcourt Ahead of Steph Curry, Klay Thompson

As the dust finally begins to settle on what was a crazy period of player movement in the NBA offseason, the western conference appears to be loaded once again heading into 2019-20.

The Splash Brothers duo of Steph Curry and Klay Thompson have occupied the top spot among the backcourts of the west for several years, but after Russell Westbrook was dealt to the Houston Rockets to team up with James Harden and Paul George combined forces with Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard for the Clippers, there are a handful of excellent duos across the league.

ESPN's Jalen and Jacoby recently released the top-five backcourts in the western conference, and guest host Ryan Hollins had some aggressively wrong unique selections.

Both had the top spot occupied by Houston's starting guards, as Westbrook and Harden have combined to win two of the last three NBA MVP awards and four of the last five NBA scoring titles. With both having the highest level of success as ball-dominant point guards in years past, it is debatable to see whether they can replicate that success as teammates, especially when there are three other teammates who will also be looking to just occasionally touch the ball.

Hollins then listed the Portland Trail Blazers' backcourt of Damian Lillard and C.J. McCollum as the No. 2 duo on his board, while David Jacoby placed Curry and Thompson in the second spot. Hollins had the Splash Brothers next at No. 3.

The former Clipper tried to justify his ranking of Curry and Thompson with the qualifier that Thompson being injured drops the Warriors' duo down the list. But it's hard to imagine if Steph Curry and Klay Thompson with his crutches walked onto a basketball court together and faced off against say, Donovan Mitchell and Mike Conley, the splash brothers would have a hard time winning that battle.

The placement of Curry and Thompson may not have been the most bizarre choice for Hollins, who also closed out his list with LeBron James and Danny Green as his fifth-best duo. While Green was an instrumental part of the Raptors' run to the title last season, he's also 32 years old and averages just nine points a game for his career. James has reportedly been preparing to play point guard for the Lakers this season, but he's also well past his thirtieth birthday and missed 27 games in 2018-19.

[RELATED: NBA rumors: Warriors' Draymond Green gets opt-out in contract extension]

ESPN appears to be sticking with the theme of allowing former players from the NFL and NBA to join the network as "talent", only to have them simply spew hot takes and generate headlines for the worldwide leader.

However, Warriors fans can take comfort in the fact that this just adds to the seemingly endless stream of bulletin board material coming out of NBA Twitter this summer.
 

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