For the final time in the 2015-2016 season, TSN 1050's Incredible Two Man Team of Duane Watson and Will Strickland - hosts of #1On1 with Will & Duane - give you hoops News, Views and Truths; that genuine adrenaline from off the wrist in this Game 7 NBA Finals edition of #3MW!

What should the Raptors do with their draft pick(s)?

Strickland: Tough to say. The No. 9 pick is draft purgatory, really, unless you get a Tracy McGrady or DeMar DeRozan as the Raptors once did. There are no such outwardly visible talents that can help this team at that spot immediately. There are already enough projects on the bench or splitting time between the D-League and the big club. And addressing the serious need at the starting power forward spot will be tough with the free agent pickings to be had. GM Masai Ujiri may be best off moving those picks and maybe a key contributor to address the aforementioned need.

Watson: There’s no one in Thursday’s draft that can come in right now and help the Raptors. After the great playoff run to the Eastern Conference Finals, they’re in ‘win now’ mode. Masai Ujiri needs to package up those picks and get a starting power forward, which has been a need since the beginning of last season.

Is Kevin Love in a Cavs uniform next season?

Strickland: Christopher Wesson Bosh, former teammate of LeBron Raymone James in Miami, addressed Kevin Wesley Love's impending relationship with Akron's finest just over 18 months ago as a sacrifice.  Not sure Love fully understood what that meant until his performance in Game 7 after a grossly underwhelming series overall for him. Nine points and 14 rebounds may seem meager in comparison to expectation based on past performance and the size of his contract. But with many casting him off as a poor fit in The Land just because of his play in the Finals (all while ignoring that he was pretty good against the other 28 teams in the league AND on that last defensive possession against the league's lone unanimous MVP), it's easy to see how social media prisoners of the moment dominate the Hot Take checkout line in the hoops cafeteria. Love will eat in Cleveland next season, at least until the trade deadline. That should give him enough time to show he’s fully in tune with his new role in the Big Three.

Watson: If a player could use one game to get back in the good graces of LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers, it was Kevin Love's nine-point, 14-rebound performance in Game 7 of the Finals. Equally as important was his key defensive stop on Steph Curry on the perimeter down the stretch of the game, where he was a plus-18 on the night. Love is finding ways to fit in now on this team and he's needed. I think he stays. 

Is Harrison Barnes in a Warriors uniform next season?

Strickland: No. The Black Falcon flies no more at Oracle. And he did it to himself. Welcome to Brooklyn, Harrison!

Watson: Barnes played himself out of a good contract this off season with his performance in the Finals. Someone may throw some cash at him, but unless he is comfortable with his role and taking his true value, he will be elsewhere. He's not trash, but he's not anything terribly special either, he just fits well with the Warriors, but not at a hefty price tag.

Is Stephen Curry still the best shooter ever?

Strickland: The Chef's regular season math, absurd range and accuracy speak to it. But his past two NBA Finals performances dull that notion dramatically. Curry will work on how he can affect the game in other ways outside of long distance shooting and getting exposed defensively. You can also be sure that filming his pre-game routine with the ball handling, tunnel launches and half court shots won't equate in game action until they become real factors for Curry when it counts most. 

Watson: Too soon? Nope. Curry defied logic in the regular season, but part of being in the best-shooter-ever conversation requires some of the clutch gene, which he didn't have in the Finals. If the Warriors had won, it would have been the second straight year that Curry wasn't the Finals MVP. And he missed some bad shots when his team needed him. He's a phenomenal shooter, but if you can't get the ball to fall when you need it most, you're not the best. Sorry.

With LeBron James leading both teams in every statistical category, was this the most dominant performance in NBA Finals history?

Strickland: Men Lie. Women Lie. These Numbers, in the faces of all of the narratives around his status in the game and overall legacy, don't. It hurts some to look at this man at the forefront of the only team to ever overcome at 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals history. But this accomplishment, along with being the only player to lead both teams in every statistical category against the greatest regular season team and lone unanimous MVP in NBA history, firmly cemented his place in the Pantheon of the greatest players to ever grace a basketball court. Period.

Watson: It's definitely the greatest that I have personally seen - his ability to dominate the game in a myriad of ways is what makes him a transcendental player of our generation. He has definitely increased his status in the all-time greats conversation after these NBA Finals.

Will Strickland @wallstrizzle1 and Duane Watson @DuaneWatson will be staying #QuillGameHeavy throughout the summer, writing on the NBA Draft, Free Agent Frenzy, Team Canada Olympic qualifiers and the 2016 Rio Games while pondering what looks to be another amazing NBA season in 2016-2017!