VanWest82 wrote:I was going to make this post a while back but sadly I got baited into a suspension by one of the usual suspects. I see these same usual suspects have come to ruin this thread...hardly surprising.squared2020 wrote:...
Please allow me to once again join the chorus of thank yous for all the work you've put in to bringing these numbers to light. Fantastic work! Also, I love your site.
My goal with this post is to address the narrative that Bulls only started winning titles once the supporting cast turned into a star-level supporting cast, usually corroborated by the 94 team's success. I've argued in many places that this is wrong, or at least incomplete due to a) ongoing development of Scottie and Horace, and b) Bulls acquiring better supporting players. Let's use squared's data to test this hypothesis.
Yeah, I mean thought it was pretty well-established/well-acknowledged that his supporting cast during the first 3peat was "good", but top-heavy. You have Pippen/Grant as 2nd/3rd-best players [which is pretty awesome], but then not good [even kinda weak some years] from 4th-12th on the roster.
wrt the 2nd 3peat.....
Those were outstanding supporting casts, at least in '96 and to a slightly lesser degree in '97 (though several wheels fell off the bus in '98, mostly with injuries to Pippen, Longley, Kerr, then Rodman [who was into decline] going a bit toxic in playoffs), and certainly an upgrade from what Jordan had in the 1st 3peat. I'd posted at length in the past about the supporting cast in '96.
While I think the Pippen/Rodman combo may have been [overall] marginally weaker than Pippen/Grant (though I'm kinda higher than some on Horace Grant), it was the extended cast that got so much better, as you imply.
For instance, the '96 squad had the 6MOY Toni Kukoc (and he was a valid choice). And assuming Toni is indeed the "6th Man" of this team, they had [far and away, imo] the best 7th-man in the league in Steve Kerr (who actually was 9th in 6MOY shares that year). They had at least a couple other fair/OK(ish) players off the bench (Buechler, Brown), too.
And I personally think Luc Longley was a small upgrade from Bill Cartwright (at least Cartwright by '92 and after).
And [arguably anyway] Ron Harper may have been a marginal upgrade from Paxson/Armstrong [whoever was starting, depending on year]. He lacks the shooting/scoring of either of them, but maintains the low-mistake/excellent turnover economy, with decidedly BETTER defense than Paxson and especially Armstrong [who was actually fairly bad defensively]; and little better rebounding, fwiw.
Those were really good casts for a couple years.
Regarding the improvement in '94......
That is especially the case coming directly off of '93 [as adjacent year comparison], which was a down year for both Pippen and Grant (whereas '94 is arguable as the peak season for both of them).