Minge wrote:colts18 wrote:-snipped-
Wilt didn't make his supporting cast better on offense, yet for a lot of Russell's tenure, the team was below average offensively. He probably has a lot to do with that.
I understand the context of this quote, it was in regard to player shooting percentages, but I want to make one clarification, before colts18 continues to post this nonsense. How can you label a team that averaged 120 points a game for almost a decade
below average offensively. It doesn't make any sense to me. None.
Let me ask you, colts18 -- Why do you think teams played at such a high pace?
The answer is -- to counter the dominant bigman. I'm sure you'll read about this, but, even in the 50's, basketball officials have tried to take away the advantages of the dominant bigman. The Lakers once played an official game with a 12-foot rim --
Mar. 7, 1954 -- I'll even include the boxscore.

It was their first attempt to take away the advantage of the bigman. It didn't work obviously, because basketball is still played with 10-foot rims. Infact the change had an opposite effect, actually gave the bigman a greater advantage, because he had more time to hold rebounding-position.
What the the league, as a whole, figured out, the way to negate the advantage of the bigman was to increase the pace. The reason -- guards dictate the tempo, the bigmen can't and don't. Who controlled the pace for the Celtics? Cousy. You know, the first great point-guard? Russell, also, had a lot to do with that. You'll probably read things, like, Russell would block shots to a teammate or block a shot in-bounds (rather than in the stands) and he mastered that art. The modern comparison for the 60's Celtics were the 80's Lakers without the "fastbreak efficieny". Cousy isn't Magic. Heisohn isn't Worthy. Russell isn't Kareem. Et cetera -- but all of those guys were runners, including Havlicek, who ran eight miles in a game even at the age of 37. If you have the time, watch some of those games, specifcally the fast break opportunities.
I'll accept those teams weren't "efficient" because offenses have evolved since then. You now have the most efficient method of creating scoring opportunies -- the "pick and roll" -- which even at the time, you didn't see two-man or three-man sets, until the triple-post offense was introduced.
I haven't seen Russell demostrate a lot of post moves, drop steps, hook shots, or finger rolls (Wilt's favorite) but he did demostrate a higher awareness, outleting the ball, or tipping the ball to a teammate to start the break, even full-court passes that were a staple of showtime.