countryboy667 wrote:IMO, Jordan won with a stacked team in one of the weaker eras of the NBA's history and doesn't deserve to be GOAT.
Right here, you invalidate your own point.
First of all, Wilt had a pair of All-Stars on his 67 title team. He obviously played fantastic basketball that season, the best of his career arguably. But he had a very high-end level of talent on his team. That Jordan had a "stacked" team is pretty much horsecrap. He had less depth that the title Lakers or Celtics from the 80s, and less than the 83 Sixers as well. Scottie was fantastic, and he had good roleplayers, and typically a quality PF. Not too different from the 67 Sixers. And that's just that Chet Walker and Hal Greer were All-Stars. Billy Cunningham would go on to be a 5-time All-Star, and was a 18.5 ppg and 7.3 rpg guy for them as well, and a quality defender. Luke Jackson had been an All-Star two years prior as a rookie, and was quite effective for them. The Sixers were very deep and had a lot of talent, especially relative to most of the rest of the league, Boston notwithstanding.
So any argument that begins with "this dude had a stacked team" as an argument in Wilt's favor is immediately made in bad faith.
It isn't unreasonable to make a case for Wilt as the GOAT. Some of us might not agree, but he was a fantastic player, with loads of achievements. But c'mon, at least make arguments which aren't disingenuous.