So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s?

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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#21 » by eminence » Thu Feb 2, 2023 1:35 am

penbeast0 wrote:I think that puts me with Indiana as most successful since I feel the ultimate measure of success is titles and playoff performance rather than regular season wins. Surprised the Knicks held on for second and that the Stars pulled 9 playoff series wins as I generally think of them as a 1 hit wonder.

Don't remember the Cavs winning one either, I had them and the Clippers as the models of futility with the Kings close behind only relieved by having Tiny for entertainment value. Detroit is amazingly futile for having prime Lanier for most of the decade.


Cavs actually beat your Bullets in '76: https://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1976-nba-eastern-conference-semifinals-bullets-vs-cavaliers.html

Must have repressed the memories, lol.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#22 » by penbeast0 » Thu Feb 2, 2023 1:36 am

Darn right I did!
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#23 » by ronnymac2 » Thu Feb 2, 2023 1:46 am

penbeast0 wrote:I think that puts me with Indiana as most successful since I feel the ultimate measure of success is titles and playoff performance rather than regular season wins. Surprised the Knicks held on for second and that the Stars pulled 9 playoff series wins as I generally think of them as a 1 hit wonder.


Willie Wise baby!

For the thread, I'd go with the Bullets, with the Knicks a close second. Bullets made, what, four finals, spread over the decade. They have a title. They've got the narrative with some of the great series of the era vs. New York, which was the best team of the mini-era of 1969-1973. Highest REG SEA SRS in 1975.

I think the Bullets were just consistently in the mix for the whole decade PLUS had the ultimate success in the form of the '78 title in a decade where the most titles won was two.

Things went awry for NYK post-1973, to the point that most people don't even recognize how great Walt Frazier was through to something like '77. Trading for McAdoo didn't work in the late 70s. Last half of this period, the Knicks were bad.

Celtics began and ended with a whimper. I can see taking Boston though with the two titles plus a 68-win season.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#24 » by Owly » Thu Feb 2, 2023 5:35 pm

penbeast0 wrote:I think that puts me with Indiana as most successful since I feel the ultimate measure of success is titles and playoff performance rather than regular season wins. Surprised the Knicks held on for second and that the Stars pulled 9 playoff series wins as I generally think of them as a 1 hit wonder.

Don't remember the Cavs winning one either, I had them and the Clippers as the models of futility with the Kings close behind only relieved by having Tiny for entertainment value. Detroit is amazingly futile for having prime Lanier for most of the decade.

Cavs series win, granting my limits in franchise specific expertise, seemed to have been somewhat of a big deal around the time and for a while after. "The Miracle of Richfield" it was called.

Stars got to three finals fwiw, though not necessarily in their strongest years. In the larger, RS, sample after Beaty's arrival, they run off 3 seasons north of 5 SRS. After three overlapping Colonels runs, the Stars have the next best 5 year SRS spell in the ABA (70-74 Stars, above 69-73 Pacers, above 71-75 Stars, above 68-72 Pacers, above 69-73 Stars.

I'm sort of willing to go along with titles as primary part of success. At the same time I think they're a way off the best. It'd be muddier crossing NBA and ABA SRS so I haven't tried it but I think their best years are in clearly the weaker league, I'd guess Daniels is a way down the NBA centers pecking order (ditto Netlolicky at PF). Not really a fan of what McGinnis gives though he's a later team. Only NBA suspended Brown (especially if we are tilting towards playoff contribution) really pops for me from them.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#25 » by Owly » Thu Feb 2, 2023 5:46 pm

ronnymac2 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:I think that puts me with Indiana as most successful since I feel the ultimate measure of success is titles and playoff performance rather than regular season wins. Surprised the Knicks held on for second and that the Stars pulled 9 playoff series wins as I generally think of them as a 1 hit wonder.


Willie Wise baby!

For the thread, I'd go with the Bullets, with the Knicks a close second. Bullets made, what, four finals, spread over the decade. They have a title. They've got the narrative with some of the great series of the era vs. New York, which was the best team of the mini-era of 1969-1973. Highest REG SEA SRS in 1975.

I think the Bullets were just consistently in the mix for the whole decade PLUS had the ultimate success in the form of the '78 title in a decade where the most titles won was two.

Things went awry for NYK post-1973, to the point that most people don't even recognize how great Walt Frazier was through to something like '77. Trading for McAdoo didn't work in the late 70s. Last half of this period, the Knicks were bad.

Celtics began and ended with a whimper. I can see taking Boston though with the two titles plus a 68-win season.

I would argue a Bullets case is more on them never being bad (or nearly always above mean) than really "always in the mix". For the first 5 years (70-74) their SRS is 1.126, whilst the Bucks are at 8.464, the Lakers 5.138, the Knicks 4.848 (then Celtics and Bulls). I guess it depends in what mix and in qualifying for the playoffs (and playing in the East) they "had a ticket", still, through that point being generally close to average and in a league with genuine titans, I might be inclined to argue they weren't in the mix with the powerhouses up to 74.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#26 » by AEnigma » Thu Feb 2, 2023 6:07 pm

ronnymac2 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:I think that puts me with Indiana as most successful since I feel the ultimate measure of success is titles and playoff performance rather than regular season wins. Surprised the Knicks held on for second and that the Stars pulled 9 playoff series wins as I generally think of them as a 1 hit wonder.

Willie Wise baby!

Image

My recollection was of them going something like 2-4 (EDIT: 2-3) against the Pacers. I know (or think I know) they lost to the Nets in 1974. I know 1973 was Pacers over Colonels, and 1972 was Pacers over… well, Nets again I guess, but that time with Rick Barry. I think they lost to the Pacers in the Finals in 1970, but the other Pacers losses were definitely before the Finals, so I guess either my memory is off or they realigned the conferences (EDIT: Yes, forgot about the transition from Los Angeles to Utah).

Still, three Finals in five years, with two other conference finals losses to the champions; very much the equivalent to the Bullets for that ABA stretch.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#27 » by penbeast0 » Thu Feb 2, 2023 8:31 pm

Owly wrote:Cavs series win, granting my limits in franchise specific expertise, seemed to have been somewhat of a big deal around the time and for a while after. "The Miracle of Richfield" it was called.

Stars got to three finals fwiw, though not necessarily in their strongest years. In the larger, RS, sample after Beaty's arrival, they run off 3 seasons north of 5 SRS. After three overlapping Colonels runs, the Stars have the next best 5 year SRS spell in the ABA (70-74 Stars, above 69-73 Pacers, above 71-75 Stars, above 68-72 Pacers, above 69-73 Stars.

I'm sort of willing to go along with titles as primary part of success. At the same time I think they're a way off the best. It'd be muddier crossing NBA and ABA SRS so I haven't tried it but I think their best years are in clearly the weaker league, I'd guess Daniels is a way down the NBA centers pecking order (ditto Netlolicky at PF). Not really a fan of what McGinnis gives though he's a later team. Only NBA suspended Brown (especially if we are tilting towards playoff contribution) really pops for me from them.


Somehow I don't think that's what it was called in the Washington papers, lol.

As far as the Pacers, their backcourt in their glory years never impressed me. Freddie Lewis was their main guard and he was a tweener who wasn't particularly a good shooter, distributor, or defender, but ok at all three. They went through several guards next to him but none that popped at all.

I think you underrate Daniels a bit; he's in the HOF now for a reason. I agree that the ABA was weaker but I was going for most successful and you can only play the schedule you are given. Daniels in the NBA, to me, would have been generally in or around the top 5 centers once he got to Indiana. He was an excellent rebounder, good scorer, weak playmaker, and worked hard on defense; not in Kareem's class but in that group just behind Cowens and McAdoo. Never seemed to slack off, like a more physical version of Alonzo Mourning without the shotblocking. McGinnis was a monster stat generator who I agree got overrated, especially with that shared MVP when Erving was clearly better. Neto was a decent and reasonably efficient scorer in the early ABA, though that was about it. Combine and 2 of those big men with Roger Brown and you had an excellent front line.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#28 » by OhayoKD » Thu Feb 2, 2023 8:37 pm

sixers. 2 rings and several near-misses.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#29 » by eminence » Thu Feb 2, 2023 8:41 pm

OhayoKD wrote:sixers. 2 rings and several near-misses.


Hmm? The Sixers won no rings in the 70s?
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#30 » by OhayoKD » Thu Feb 2, 2023 8:46 pm

eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:sixers. 2 rings and several near-misses.


Hmm? The Sixers won no rings in the 70s?

*knicks
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#31 » by Owly » Thu Feb 2, 2023 9:17 pm

penbeast0 wrote:
Owly wrote:Cavs series win, granting my limits in franchise specific expertise, seemed to have been somewhat of a big deal around the time and for a while after. "The Miracle of Richfield" it was called.

Stars got to three finals fwiw, though not necessarily in their strongest years. In the larger, RS, sample after Beaty's arrival, they run off 3 seasons north of 5 SRS. After three overlapping Colonels runs, the Stars have the next best 5 year SRS spell in the ABA (70-74 Stars, above 69-73 Pacers, above 71-75 Stars, above 68-72 Pacers, above 69-73 Stars.

I'm sort of willing to go along with titles as primary part of success. At the same time I think they're a way off the best. It'd be muddier crossing NBA and ABA SRS so I haven't tried it but I think their best years are in clearly the weaker league, I'd guess Daniels is a way down the NBA centers pecking order (ditto Netlolicky at PF). Not really a fan of what McGinnis gives though he's a later team. Only NBA suspended Brown (especially if we are tilting towards playoff contribution) really pops for me from them.


Somehow I don't think that's what it was called in the Washington papers, lol.

As far as the Pacers, their backcourt in their glory years never impressed me. Freddie Lewis was their main guard and he was a tweener who wasn't particularly a good shooter, distributor, or defender, but ok at all three. They went through several guards next to him but none that popped at all.

I think you underrate Daniels a bit; he's in the HOF now for a reason. I agree that the ABA was weaker but I was going for most successful and you can only play the schedule you are given. Daniels in the NBA, to me, would have been generally in or around the top 5 centers once he got to Indiana. He was an excellent rebounder, good scorer, weak playmaker, and worked hard on defense; not in Kareem's class but in that group just behind Cowens and McAdoo. Never seemed to slack off, like a more physical version of Alonzo Mourning without the shotblocking. McGinnis was a monster stat generator who I agree got overrated, especially with that shared MVP when Erving was clearly better. Neto was a decent and reasonably efficient scorer in the early ABA, though that was about it. Combine and 2 of those big men with Roger Brown and you had an excellent front line.

Don't think we're going to agree on Daniels (think we've been around this before).

Of course he's in the hall, he's of narrative significance (titles, ABA MVP) as well as good (though he's in 2012 in "circling back" way like DJ in 2010 or Gus Johnson in 2010 - I think there was an ABA committee at the time).

On weaker in the Daniels context I think he was at his strongest whilst the ABA was a second tier league. And I think if he was in the NBA he looks not just worse in the shade of titans of the game (Wilt, Russell, Jabbar) but a way down the pecking order versus Cowens, Lanier, Reed, Thurmond, Hayes, Unseld ... later Gilmore, McAdoo ... You'd have to look closer at individual years and the number of teams but it doesn't seem wild at first glance that he's a sub-median starter at the position in the NBA. Now it's a very competitive position. And maybe I can't quite justify that because in a given year there's injuries and Russell and Jabbar don't overlap but still. Beaty has less hardware but pushed his team to similar levels later on in the ABA, was otoh clearly more productive in box composites and had been good but ... he wasn't making the hall off his NBA career. I think I'd have to believe he was a non-box monster to push him up, maybe he was. If he had lasted better, or proven himself in the NBA or both ... if he had some impact signals like Zo does ...

At the margins circa average efficiency, FT% as an indicator of spacing and weak assist numbers would shade me negative.

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I said I'm cool taking them as case of success. They happened win titles as it actually happened. That can't be taken away and the title is the end goal. I just, given the thread title, think it's worth highlighting that I also think they were lucky to win as many as they did (not a dominant RS team, as alluded to by those 5 year runs in the prior post) and the league was weaker. Put it this way the Bucks were dominating teams most nights in a tougher league over that era and, whilst playoffs add a larger element of luck, I'd be very surprised if the Bucks roster didn't look quite considerably better if put in their place.
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#32 » by TT8198 » Thu Feb 2, 2023 9:22 pm

Bullets went to the Finals I believe 4 times in the 70s which is the most out of any other team that decade so I'd say the Bullets as well

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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#33 » by ty 4191 » Fri Feb 3, 2023 10:17 am

penbeast0 wrote:How about playoff games won for the decade? Curious if it shows the Bullets in a better light and the Bucks a bit worse or not.


https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask?q=most+playoff+wins+by+a+team+1969-70+to+1978-79
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Re: So who was the best/most successful team of the 1970s? 

Post#34 » by penbeast0 » Fri Feb 3, 2023 11:56 am

ty 4191 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:How about playoff games won for the decade? Curious if it shows the Bullets in a better light and the Bucks a bit worse or not.


https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask?q=most+playoff+wins+by+a+team+1969-70+to+1978-79


Thank you.
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