penbeast0 wrote:Same for Thurmond who was still in his "Nate the Great" mindset taking 20 shots a game at a ts% efficiency of .460 while leading his team to a .500 record (which is good for a team with that talent level, but not amazing).
Not trying to argue for Thurmond > Russell, but this is a very misleading representation of what happened in 1969 Warriors season...
Warriors finished 41-41 in the RS, so techically it's true. The problem is that they went 38-33 with Thurmond (who missed 11 games), which puts them around 44 wins pace, but they collapsed without him and went 3-8 when he sat out. It's not a one year small sample thing either:
1967 Warriors with Nate: 38-27 (48 wins pace)
1967 Warriors without Nate: 6-10 (31 wins pace)
1968 Warriors with Nate: 32-19 (51 wins pace)
1968 Warriors without Nate: 11-20 (29 wins pace)
1969 Warriors with Nate: 38-33 (44 wins pace)
1969 Warriors without Nate: 3-8 (31 wins pace)
1970 Warriors with Nate: 21-22 (40 wins pace)
1970 Warriors without Nate: 9-30 (19 wins pace)
Across 4 straight years, we see a very consistent pattern - Thurmond was extremely valuable to the Warriors, they played extremely bad without him (even with Barry on the team):
1967-70 Warriors with Nate: 129-101 (46 wins pace)
1967-70 Warriors without Nate: 29-20 (25 wins pace)
RS Unseld did take the worst team in the Eastern Conference the year before to the best record in the league despite losing All-Pro forward Gus Johnson halfway through.
He did and I will always praise Unseld for his tremendous non-boxscore impact, but it should be noted that the raw jump in wins overrate his impact a little bit:
1968 Bullets: -0.23 SRS (40 expected wins, 36 actual wins)
1969 Bullets: +4.05 SRS (51 expected wins, 57 actual wins)
The jump was probably bigger than 10 wins that SRS suggest, but it's also likely smaller than 20 wins which raw record suggests.