One of - if not the - greatest ever.
RIP Big man

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henshao wrote:Unless I'm mistaken Wilt only ever had praise for Bill, which is saying a lot
Owly wrote:henshao wrote:Unless I'm mistaken Wilt only ever had praise for Bill, which is saying a lot
I believe you are mistaken.
Russell's comments regarding how Chamberlain came out of their final game led to a relationship that was fractured for a long time (until late in Chamberlain's life). I don't know to what extent it was openly hostile but certainly frosty. Skimming "A View from Above" in a list ranking the top 5 centers he lists Russell top then implicitly(? ... maybe explicitly) calls himself better having not listed himself, anyway he says he "might like Russell less than some of the other guys" but that it doesn't affect how he rates him as a player. Further to the fracture (p183, paperback) he outright asks for an apology from Russell and goes on to assert that Russell hasn't done so, not because he hasn't done anything wrong but simply said, "No, I can't apologize. I'm not that kind of guy" (p184). I have a vague recollection that he may have said something to the effect that he was a bigger person in defeat than Russell in victory though it's vague and could be something where the phrasing and nuance matters.
This isn't to paint either man in a bad light, but I think Wilt said less than praising things of Russell.
henshao wrote:Well, I mean in a basketball sense. He considered Russell the #1 center of all time if he excluded himself. Obviously both of those men were deeply complex individuals and their relationship as well.
Owly wrote:henshao wrote:Unless I'm mistaken Wilt only ever had praise for Bill, which is saying a lot
I believe you are mistaken.
Russell's comments regarding how Chamberlain came out of their final game led to a relationship that was fractured for a long time (until late in Chamberlain's life). I don't know to what extent it was openly hostile but certainly frosty. Skimming "A View from Above" in a list ranking the top 5 centers he lists Russell top then implicitly(? ... maybe explicitly) calls himself better having not listed himself, anyway he says he "might like Russell less than some of the other guys" but that it doesn't affect how he rates him as a player. Further to the fracture (p183, paperback) he outright asks for an apology from Russell and goes on to assert that Russell hasn't done so, not because he hasn't done anything wrong but simply said, "No, I can't apologize. I'm not that kind of guy" (p184). I have a vague recollection that he may have said something to the effect that he was a bigger person in defeat than Russell in victory though it's vague and could be something where the phrasing and nuance matters.
This isn't to paint either man in a bad light, but I think Wilt said less than praising things of Russell.
Owly wrote:Owly wrote:henshao wrote:Unless I'm mistaken Wilt only ever had praise for Bill, which is saying a lot
I believe you are mistaken.
Russell's comments regarding how Chamberlain came out of their final game led to a relationship that was fractured for a long time (until late in Chamberlain's life). I don't know to what extent it was openly hostile but certainly frosty. Skimming "A View from Above" in a list ranking the top 5 centers he lists Russell top then implicitly(? ... maybe explicitly) calls himself better having not listed himself, anyway he says he "might like Russell less than some of the other guys" but that it doesn't affect how he rates him as a player. Further to the fracture (p183, paperback) he outright asks for an apology from Russell and goes on to assert that Russell hasn't done so, not because he hasn't done anything wrong but simply said, "No, I can't apologize. I'm not that kind of guy" (p184). I have a vague recollection that he may have said something to the effect that he was a bigger person in defeat than Russell in victory though it's vague and could be something where the phrasing and nuance matters.
This isn't to paint either man in a bad light, but I think Wilt said less than praising things of Russell.henshao wrote:Well, I mean in a basketball sense. He considered Russell the #1 center of all time if he excluded himself. Obviously both of those men were deeply complex individuals and their relationship as well.
To be clear I would argue are mistaken by this meaning too.
I'd suggest you wouldn't have to search hard to find either back-handed compliments e.g. "Russell was content - and secure enough - to let others score (it helped that he was not what you'd call a great shooter)" (AVfA, p102) or comparisons between himself and Russell designed to promote himself and highlight Russell limitations "Russell never had the talent to score fifty points" (and just a couple of lines later) "You never saw three players on my team guarding Bill Russell" (AVfA p104). Then after some discussion of their perceived personas and his role as the villain and then Russell's later perception (in light of apparent inability to handle an executive or even coaching job, perception of him as arrogant, second marriage to "a white lady") the paragraph closes "There was never anything said about his foul shooting - when in fact it was often worse than mine" (AVfA, p107).
It might be argued to be an extension of their fallout - hard to parse out as the icy relationship would last the majority of Chamberlain's adult life - but regardless in this 'with regard to playing' framing "only ever had praise" simply does not ring true.
Again this is not to say either was right or wrong and as you note these are complex human beings. Still despite the sadness of Bill's passing, I think there should be accuracy in recording their relationship.
fwiw I found the quote about "bigger person". It's in Wilt's first autobiog ... it's not quite exactly that ... it says he "grew more as a man in defeat than Russell did in victory" but goes further calling Bill a "shallower man for all his basketball triumphs, and rather than being angry or envious over his victories and his gloating and his raps at me, I feel sorry for him." (Wilt:JLAO7FBMWLND, '73, p223, cf p220-223).
70sFan wrote:I don't think people realize how incredible Russell's career truly was. Even though it's fine to have other players at the GOAT position, I think nobody else has as credible argument as Russell. He is truly the greatest player ever and he's bigger than the sport we all love.
henshao wrote:Owly wrote:Owly wrote:I believe you are mistaken.
Russell's comments regarding how Chamberlain came out of their final game led to a relationship that was fractured for a long time (until late in Chamberlain's life). I don't know to what extent it was openly hostile but certainly frosty. Skimming "A View from Above" in a list ranking the top 5 centers he lists Russell top then implicitly(? ... maybe explicitly) calls himself better having not listed himself, anyway he says he "might like Russell less than some of the other guys" but that it doesn't affect how he rates him as a player. Further to the fracture (p183, paperback) he outright asks for an apology from Russell and goes on to assert that Russell hasn't done so, not because he hasn't done anything wrong but simply said, "No, I can't apologize. I'm not that kind of guy" (p184). I have a vague recollection that he may have said something to the effect that he was a bigger person in defeat than Russell in victory though it's vague and could be something where the phrasing and nuance matters.
This isn't to paint either man in a bad light, but I think Wilt said less than praising things of Russell.henshao wrote:Well, I mean in a basketball sense. He considered Russell the #1 center of all time if he excluded himself. Obviously both of those men were deeply complex individuals and their relationship as well.
To be clear I would argue are mistaken by this meaning too.
I'd suggest you wouldn't have to search hard to find either back-handed compliments e.g. "Russell was content - and secure enough - to let others score (it helped that he was not what you'd call a great shooter)" (AVfA, p102) or comparisons between himself and Russell designed to promote himself and highlight Russell limitations "Russell never had the talent to score fifty points" (and just a couple of lines later) "You never saw three players on my team guarding Bill Russell" (AVfA p104). Then after some discussion of their perceived personas and his role as the villain and then Russell's later perception (in light of apparent inability to handle an executive or even coaching job, perception of him as arrogant, second marriage to "a white lady") the paragraph closes "There was never anything said about his foul shooting - when in fact it was often worse than mine" (AVfA, p107).
It might be argued to be an extension of their fallout - hard to parse out as the icy relationship would last the majority of Chamberlain's adult life - but regardless in this 'with regard to playing' framing "only ever had praise" simply does not ring true.
Again this is not to say either was right or wrong and as you note these are complex human beings. Still despite the sadness of Bill's passing, I think there should be accuracy in recording their relationship.
fwiw I found the quote about "bigger person". It's in Wilt's first autobiog ... it's not quite exactly that ... it says he "grew more as a man in defeat than Russell did in victory" but goes further calling Bill a "shallower man for all his basketball triumphs, and rather than being angry or envious over his victories and his gloating and his raps at me, I feel sorry for him." (Wilt:JLAO7FBMWLND, '73, p223, cf p220-223).
I see it the other way; a begrudging compliment is the most honest of all. In reading Wilt's words I am reminded of the movie Gattaca. The genetically engineered Jerome Morrow "was never meant to be one step down on the podium." God's gift to basketball was never as successful as Bill Russell and as simultaneously talented and intelligent as Wilt was I think that bothered him on almost a spiritual level.
Owly wrote:Fwiw, I'd suggest more broadly that many/most (at least the most vocal, most heard) players tend to believe their era was the toughest/best and their rivals were the toughest opponents. It's the most "natural", easiest self-interested view.