70sFan wrote:
Russell's case is more straightforward than any other player's though - he's the most dominant, most consistent, most successful, most impactful basketball player with basically perfect resume. I don't see any way to put Jordan higher than him, unless you want to be really harsh on his era (but then I don't see any reason to put Jordan over modern players as well).
The main argument is the fewer teams playing during his era, which raises the chance of success.
His first 4 championship there were only 8 teams and he only had to win 2 playoff series.
Then 5 with 9 teams, still only 2 playoff series to win.
Then 2 with 10 teams, 3 playoff series.
Jordan played in league with 28+ teams and always 4 playoff rounds. It's just lower odds of winning.