trex_8063 wrote:Just by way of playing devil's advocate (since I believe you're in the camp of believing the pre-merger 70's NBA to somewhat of a water-down era), could it simply be declined level of competition that, in part, provides the perception that Hondo improved significantly in the 70s?
Also (and I've elaborated on this at some point in the past, iirc, and this applies to Havliceck as well as Cousy et al), I believe hyper-inflated pace has a deleterious effect on team offensive performance/efficiency. And I have the correlation studies to back up this opinion. This bears relevance because it's in the 70's that league average pace began to return to earth (also worth noting that in the mid-60's and earlier, the Celtics typically had one of the fastest paces in the league).
Both of those are true to some degree. But you are comparing Sam Jones to Havlicek in identical years and Sam looks better (to me, at least offensively). And, the pace argument would imply that in a different offense (with similar teammates) he would score less at greater efficiency (as would Havlicek). Not sure whether that makes him more impressive or less, it would depend on the degree. What I can say is that of the Celtics, limiting comparison to just the Russell ear, Sam Jones looks like the best offensive player.


























