euroleague wrote:BombsquadSammy wrote:"The greatest measure of an individual is how many times a team of more than 50 players, coaches, trainers, doctors, scouts, analysts, and executives works together to accomplish a collective goal."
This is what the 'ringz' argument parses down to-- period--, and it's an inherently and self-evidently flawed position. It's like arguing that Gomer Pyle is a greater warrior than Karl von Bulow because the United States won more wars than Germany.
The problem is that in the late 70s and early 80s, media was so pervasively influential in American thought that when marketers recognized the sales potential of superstar athletes, people began to conflate their love of team sports with their fascination with celebrity, and that led to conflating the ultimate goal of team sports-- team championships, which are won by teams-- with discussions about which individual players were best. We started viewing what we already recognize as the ultimate goal in sports-- the team championship-- as though it were an individual accomplishment, and started wrongly imparting it to players as an individual accomplishment. That's why we so frequently hear things like 'player X won two titles', 'player X needs to win a title to secure his legacy'; players don't win titles; teams do, and it's never actually correct to say 'player X won a title'.
We all want to know who the greatest players and teams are, but we have to remember that individual greatness and team greatness are two different things. Men don't win wars (nations do) and nations aren't awarded Purple Hearts (soldiers are), to revisit the military analogy; in the same sense, teams don't win MVPs (players do) and players don't win championships (teams do).
Scouts, executives, analysts, doctors... they aren't winning. Coaches are on the side. The players on the court are winning.
No, the players are on the court
playing. Playing is
part of winning-- the most important part, to be sure--, but to say that the
only thing that matters is what happens between the lines is to ignore reality, which is that what happens in the realms of coaching, training, scouting, and healing
creates what's put in between the lines to do the playing.
Otherwise, why have the Pops and Phils and Reds and Rileys at all? Why have trainers and scouts? Why do we care what Phil said here and why is there a thread about it if the only thing that matters is what happens on the hardwood?
euroleague wrote:
Using black and white to say the player didn't win is too simple.
No, it's not. Kevin Durant is
not the 2017 NBA champion--
Golden State is. There are no title banners hanging in any player's living room-- they hang in the arena, where the
entire team plays and works. Championship trophies have team names on them, not individuals' names. None of these are matters of opinion or interpretations; they're all
facts.