Vote: Bill Russell
If you looked up winner in a basketball dictionary, I think it would just be a picture of Bill Russell. 11 championships in 13 years. Its crazy to think about especially today where three-peats are incredibly rare. I'd like to remove all of that for my conversation about Bill Russell. I don't want to talk about the player-coaching. I don't want to talk about the leadership on and off the court where he was a leader in the civil rights movement.
Lets talk about what he did on the court and lets strip him of his 11 rings.

To talk about Bill is to talk about Wilt. They are the yin and yang of 60s basketball. To me, these guys are clearly the best of this era and fought it out many times over their years so they were constantly compared. Wilt is known as a offensive behemoth and Russell is thought of as a leader and a hustler. I both don't think Russell gets enough credit and Wilt gets far too much.
Where Wilt had incredible offensive box scores, Bill did not and did not try to. Wilt and Bill were gifted with an assortment of all-star teammates. Where Wilt blasted by them with his volume scoring, Bill did not.
Russell’s teams, however, were not offensively talented. During a majority of Bill’s career, the Celtics were a below to bottom of the league offense in ORTG (they also ranked dead last 3/13 times).
Season ORTG Finish
1956-57 5/8
1957-58 7/8
1958-59 5/8
1959-60 5/8
1960-61 8/8
1961-62 7/9
1962-63 9/9
1963-64 9/9
1964-65 7/9
1965-66 8/9
1966-67 4/10
1967-68 8/12
1968-69 10/14
Some people use this as a positive to show that it was Bill Russell’s defense that created his value as one of the greatest of all time. While I believe this true, his lack of offensive prowess was a detriment to his team, but not as much as it could have been if he forced shots. Russell was not relied on for offense and for good reason. Russell was near league average TS% on below league average FGA/36 minutes.
Season rTS% rFGA
1956-57 0.10% -0.39
1957-58 1.60% -1.18
1958-59 3.60% -3.35
1959-60 3.30% -4.34
1960-61 -1.50% -3.41
1961-62 1.00% -2.96
1962-63 -2.90% -2.99
1963-64 -2.40% -3.76
1964-65 -0.70% -4.78
1965-66 -3.90% -5.33
1966-67 0.70% -5.88
1967-68 -3.70% -4.53
1968-69 -2.40% -7.67
So how can Bill Russell not be blown out by Wilt offensively?
For starters, unlike Wilt, Russell moved around on offense. This led to more avenues for his teammates to attack and for Russell to impact the game when he didn't have the ball. You don't see a ton of screens, PNR, or DHOs in 60s ball, but the Celtics and Russell used them to attack dropping bigs and off-ball to create openings. Like the modern day, this allowed a non-offensive threat to create space for his teammates.
Russell also took a lot of the Celtics missed shots and turned them into more opportunities. He was a ferocious rebounder battling anyone and everyone for on the boards. Russell was also a good decision maker on when to go back up himself or kick out for a reset or an open shot.
Lastly, Russell hustled down the court or started the break on nearly every possession. By virtue of being near the basket each defensive possession, he came down with defensive rebounds aplenty and was quick to throw touchdown passes or quickly to a guard. When he wasn't the rebounder he'd sprint down the floor for easy ones. The Celtics offense was at its best when it was working in transition.
But, Russell gains significant traction in this conversation based on his defense. Due to his era (no three point line or illegal defense), the center position was the most important position defensively and by a huge margin. And Russell was the best defender of this era.
Russell was incredibly athletic and long (estimated wingspan of 7'4), but his best asset was his brain. Russell is known to not only block shots, but keep them inbounds. He is also one of the fathers of deterring the shot rather than blocking it (wrote about this phenomenon here:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=2194359&p=99152325#p99152325).
To compare him to modern day bigs, Russell was probably a better weak-side helper than a drop big. He had incredible instinct for when to leave his man and run to help clean up messes. He was incredibly quick and smart with these reads, rarely missing them.
Thinking Basketball has a great video on the Wilt vs Russell debate. There is a section where they explain Russell's dominance on defense against Wilt (@11:04
https://youtu.be/kCKSvjBnCRQ, but entire video is worth the watch). To summarize, though Wilt continued to score massive points against Russell, in their career facing each other Bill shaved 8 points/gm off his average and more importantly 3% of his TS% basically making him an average efficiency scorer (where Wilt's team's offenses were already in dire need of offense).
His utter domination on defense, his selflessness and motor on offense and his relative longevity make Bill Russell a perfect candidate for the number 4 spot for the Top 100.
Nomination: Kevin GarnettJust going to put my blurb about him from last time.