LukaTheGOAT wrote:Then there is the fact that Bird was the undisputed best player on some historic offenses that surpassed what Kobe did. For example, the 1988 Celtics had an offense surpassing the RS efficiency of even the 87 peak Lakers. Boston’s true shooting percentage was 58.8% in 1988, a record that would stand until the 2016 Warriors shot 59 percent in their 73-win season per Backpicks.
It was just the RS either. 1986-1988 Boston had a rORTG of +7 in the PS. The 08-10 Lakers were close at +6.7. However, Bird has more stretches of guiding truly prolific PS offense as the true #1.
Bird's never been on a playoff offense nearly as good as the +13(+20 overall). A 5-point(13-point overall) improvement from what they were in 2000 by san's psrs. Very easy to argue from any statisical lense Kobe played better offensively that run than Bird ever has. And those statistics are giving bird lots of credit for uncontested rebounds and no blame for when he gives up layups or gets blown by.
And when we look at non-box, we see Bird does not look anything close to the league-best force people think he was.
This is particularly noteworthy because Bird played in one of the most important defensive positions on the floor for much of the time at the PF position. In the 1980 and ’81 playoffs, Bird logged about 43 minutes per game next to Dave Cowens, Parish or Rick Robey had a really strong steal rate of 2.3 percent and block rate 1.5 percent.
Problem is Bird wasn't the first or even second rim protector. Which makes him a potential liability at power-forward with the right matchups(cough Pistons cough). Bird is an excellent example of worse defenders getting to inflate their numbers by playing next to better ones.
In that light, I do not see how box-aggregates make a strong case for him.
If you look at things in comparison to how they did versus their peers against the same defenses in the PS, the Celtics gain even more ground.
The Boston Celtics did by far the worst against the Pistons relative to the Bird and Magic.
Reggie Miller led more reselient defenses piping him in terms of playoff offense overall. So yeah, not sure how this helps Bird. As covered Bird's scoring and playmaking volume fell off without a trade-off in effeciency, and using advanced creation stuff(passer-rating, box oc) we see that Kobe and Bird are outright comparable creators with Kobe's far better ball-handling and more versatile scoring arsenal compensating for Bird's raw passing advantage.
Magic, Reggie, and Jordan all led better playoff offenses. Even without Shaq, Kobe's offenses were similar and with they are obviously better.
You can argue Bird had an edge well enough, but trying to mark the gap as big requires an aggressive cherrypicking of evidence.
And Kobe very obviously has the career value/longetvity, and also very obviously has the winning, versatility, proof of concept in a variety of contexts, and played in the better league against better competition. He also reached higher highs in the playoffs matching or exceeding all of Bird's accomplished with the exception of regular-season MVP's.
Bird may have been Magic's rival, but that was only in stature. He was nowhere close when it came to basketball.