ty 4191 wrote:CobraCommander wrote:I’m looking at your post thinking you are implying that Jokic is an all time great - like a few rings from top 10...maybe already top 20....no one other than Lebron and Curry are top 20 right now IMO....but Jokic is trending (with 2 more rings) into the top 10-5 range...
I don't use rings as my barometer of greatness and value. Here's why:
Salty1 wrote:Simple. Win more championships. What’s with these nerdy questions.
Ah yes, the (dreaded) "rings" argument again?
Michael Jordan through age 27, Playoffs, before they built a tremendous team around him:
-Playoffs (53 games)
-Team Record: 24-29
-Team Series Record: 5-6
-3 first round exits, including 2 first round sweeps
-Two ECF
Jordan's career line: 36.2/6.9/6.7 on +4.7% rTS. Led all players those years in all advanced and traditional metrics in the playoffs.
Nikola Jokic through age 26, Playoffs:
-Playoffs: (48 games)
-Team Record: 21-27
-Team Series Record: 4-4
-1 first round exit
-1 WCF
Jokic's career line: 26.4/11.5/6.4 on +4.1 rTS%. Top 3 player in all advanced and traditional metrics in the playoffs those 4 years.
Kevin Garnett through age 27, Playoffs:
-Playoffs: (47 games)
-Team Record: 17-30
-Team Series Record: 2-8
-7 first round exits
-1 WCF
Garnett's career line: 23.3/13.4/5.0. 2nd in Defensive Rating in the playoffs, those years, among players with 2000 MP. RAPM ranks him as the second most impactful player of 2002-2007 period, overall, in the NBA.
Wilt Chamberlain through age 28, Playoffs:
-Playoffs: (47 games)
-Team Record: 21-26
-Team Series Record: 4-5
-Much shorter playoffs structure, so they're incompatible.
Still:
Wilt's career line: 33.4/26.0/3.2 on +4.7 tTS%. Clearly the MVP in the playoffs in all advanced and traditional box score metrics.
Oscar Robertson through age 31, Playoffs:
-Playoffs: (39 games)
-Team Record: 15-24
-Team Series Record: 2-6
-4 first round exits
-2 EDF
Oscar's career playoff line: 29.7/9.3/9.4 on an astounding +8.2 rTS%. Clearly, a top 2-3 player overall in the playoffs in all advanced and traditional box score metrics. He had 8 triple doubles in those 39 games, and that's when the assist rule precluded assists if the player receiving the ball dribbled before he took the shot. Much harder to get assists back then vs. today.
What did Michael Jordan win before they built a tremendous team around him, while also bringing in arguably the greatest coach of all time?
What did Wilt win, while he had coaches (that got fired or resigned every year or so) 1960-1966?
What did he win before he got great coaches, teammates, ownership, management around him?
Or maybe, just maybe, “Ring count” is not about how great YOU are, but how great your teammates, coaches, management, ownership are?