The San Antonio Spurs won one for the thumb on Sunday night, ending a stellar 2014 postseason on the highest of notes. In the afterglow of the Spurs’ fifth championship in 15 years, For The Win looks at nine amazing stats about San Antonio’s dominance, which is pretty ironic given that the Spurs are one team that seems entirely unconcerned with statistics.

1. Seven teams, including the Spurs, have won 30 of the past 31 NBA titles.

Since 1984, only eight teams — the Lakers, Celtics, Pistons, Bulls, Rockets, Spurs, Mavericks and Heat — have won an NBA championship. The NFL has seen 17 winners over the same stretch, compared to 19 for Major League Baseball. Each of those NBA title teams, with the exception of the Mavericks, has won more than one title in that span. With a more narrow gaze, the Spurs, Lakers and Heat have won 10 of the past 13 titles.

2. Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker have the most playoff wins of any threesome in NBA history.

The 118 playoff wins for San Antonio’s Big Three is better than Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Michael Cooper who had 110 with the Los Angeles Lakers.

3. The Spurs’ 14.5-point margin of victory was the highest in NBA Finals history.

The Finals was more of the same for San Antonio, which showed historical dominance during the 2014 postseason. In 12 of its 16 playoff wins, the Spurs won by 15 points or more. Not surprisingly, that’s the most in NBA history. (After narrowly defeating Dallas for its first three wins of the playoffs, San Antonio actually won 12 of its final 13 playoff games by 15+ points.) Also not surprising: The Spurs outscored opponents in the playoffs by 214 points, the largest margin in NBA history.

4. San Antonio had the highest field-goal percentage in NBA Finals history.

Since the advent of the shot clock, the Spurs’ 52.8 field-goal percentage was the best in Finals history, breaking the record of the 1991 Chicago Bulls.

5. Tony Parker led San Antonio in scoring with the fewest points per-game of any leading scorer on a championship team.

According to Elias, Parker’s 17.4 points per game in the Finals, which led the Spurs, was the lowest for any leading scorer on a title team since the shot clock was introduced. Four Spurs players (Parker, Duncan, Ginobili and Kawhi Leonard) averaged 14 points or more.

6. The Spurs have only had five 30-point scoring games in their six Finals appearances.

Andy Hutchins of SB Nation shares this mind-blowing statistic:

Shaq had six 30-point games in the 2000 NBA Finals. (He averaged 38 and 17.) The Spurs have five … ever. — Andy Hutchins (@AndyHutchins) June 16, 2014

7. San Antonio has won a title in four, five, six and seven games.

This was actually true prior to this series, but it’s still amusing. The Spurs swept LeBron and the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2007, went five with the Knicks in 1999, were pushed to six against the Nets in 2003 and went the distance versus Detroit in 2005. They win in all sorts of ways.

8. Tim Duncan is the only player to start on a championship team in three different decades.

Duncan won his first title in 1999, had three championship in the aughts and capped it off with a title in 2014. The only other player to be on the roster for a title team in three different decades was John Salley, the sixth man on the Bad Boy Detroit Pistons teams of 1989 and 1990 who was also on the end of the Lakers bench for the team’s 2000 championship.

9. The Spurs have won 50 games or more in each of the last 14 seasons.

This is the stat that sums up San Antonio’s dominance the best. In each of the past 14 years, the Spurs have 50 wins or more, including their 50-16 record in the lockout season of 2011-12. If not for another lockout, Duncan would be able to boast that he was always on a 50+ win team. The Spurs went 37-13 in Duncan’s lockout-shortened rookie season, a winning percentage that would equate to 60 wins in a full 82-game schedule.

Five titles in 15 years speaks for itself. But never having an off-year is a tribute to the consistency and tenacity of the San Antonio Spurs.