penbeast0 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:...I don't believe Red ever criticized Cousy's defense or defensive effort (something which cannot be said for Cliff Hagan, fwiw)....
Red had already gone on record as not wanting Holy Cross star Bob Cousy in the draft, "Am I supposed to win, or please the local yokels?"
Cousy was picked fourth in the first round, by Tri-Cities, but was soon traded to the Chicago Stags. Before the season started, the Stags folded and their best players were distributed throughout the league. The names of Max Zaslofsky, Andy Phillip, and Cousy were put into a hat. After the Knicks drew Zaslofsky, Boston got "stuck" with Cousy. This expansion draft is when Red went on record as saying that he wanted Zaslofsky and didn't want Cousy because of his poor defense, though I couldn't find the actual quote. Once Cousy became a Celtic, there is nothing I've seen about Red criticizing Cousy even pre-Russell.
On the "yokels" ...
It's far enough back that there are two alternate versions iirc, that have made some play in publications one where Cousy is the local yokel, one where it's the fans, I
think the fans one is more common.
[Dug it up - the (or at least 'a') Cousy version, taken here from Ever Green, Shaughnessy, p7 - is "I'm not interested in drafting someone just because he happens to be a local yokel."]
That is, as you say, before he actually had Cousy as a pro. And as the distinct yet related quotes may suggest (if they aren't cited, and if one believes that it's unlikely he gave two "local yokel" quotes) these things aren't perfectly reliable.
Given I was kind of tagged at and this this post will alert TRex anyway ...
I've been someone who put forward the "pressure offense" stuff, found quotes supporting it. I don't think it's nothing. At the same time I'd guess it's marginal. Cousy's the one in charge of making it work, it's his decisions to make. Reference estimates are not certain and yes that compromises box-composites ... I would hope only at the margins. It's not the RS OWS drop though. Its those who would invoke the titles whilst not being explicit that he shot really badly on those title runs leading to -1.3 OWS on those runs ... -0.8 if we include '58 which in fairness I think we probably should ... it seems unfair to punish a strong run that's part of that era because there isn't at title - though I can argue for it if the titles are the thing) ... at the same time ... even versus his diminished RS offensive output in that era ... it's a nasty fall. I can live with a production and 50s accolades and status case. I can ... maybe tolerate a rings case (honestly, probably not very much) ... perhaps if consistently applied. I don't like a smushed together legacy case that says production and titles and ignores the really lousy shooting and OWS for the titles. OWS is only one measure but it's so far beneath water [because .000 OWS/48 is awful] that ... it's concerning. Maybe the incompleteness of those numbers is hurting at the margins on the aggregate side. And to be sure earlier he had some stronger playoffs. Even so like I say that smushed up legacy case seems to me to hide that he wasn't that helpful in the playoffs for those titles. That isn't particularly "at" you though skimming at your case it might not entirely not apply, either.
I can see arguments for him as a great offensive guard and a star early. I can also see someone's got to take a hit for Boston being unexceptional with 3 "stars". I think Macauley takes the biggest hit. All the bigs were productive at the time. My guess/impression is he's Amar'e ish where he's giving a lot ... maybe just as much ... back at the other end. I see some stuff in terms of status and longevity (and production) for Cousy over Sharman. But Sharman ... I like the efficiency, I like the coaching and intelligence shown there, I like the talk about his prep and considering diet, I like that like Cousy he's a competitor, I like the defensive rep, I like the perpetual motion, I like the spacing [I think there's a lot to like, things that tend to suggest "better than his boxscore"] ... . I think Cousy starts at a higher rep so he can take a hit and still come out even (or even ahead) but I think he's next in taking a hit (forwards just being bad is part of it too)... and it's not that Boston were bad or, if I'm fair and giving a playoff heavy view (partially in terms of arguing for what I think others playoff orientated criteria could be) late on, that he doesn't have strong playoff performances. But in a pretty even league if Cousy were a superstar, if he were that far out above his Pg peers (as maybe his box suggests) there's a bit of "Why aren't Boston better?" why aren't they ... not particularly not champs but ... not expected to be champs not a powerhouse team (not that they couldn't have snagged a ring in the interregnum between dynastic powerhouses but it's not a surprise that they didn't) . And at this point we're talking very noisy very fuzzy, very guesswork-y stuff. Information is limited. Uncertainty is high. Plausible ranges are big.
Tangent-y random thought on pace and fast-breaking, it gets a bit zero sum with Russell. If Russell's this great outlet passer and Cousy's a great point man (and Boston are getting the ball live so often) ... I'm not that high on Russell offensively, as before there's uncertainty in team possession estimates, there may be some mitigation in a strategy of exhausting opponents (
maybe one could argue it's all on these factors ...) ... still couldn't it (shouldn't it?) be better?
On the quote in particular
"I don't believe Red ever criticized Cousy's defense or defensive effort (something which cannot be said for Cliff Hagan, fwiw)"
Leaving aside why Red would be criticizing Hagan's defense (or Hagan criticizing Bob's...)
Seriously though ...
Cousy side
1) I think what you mean is "I don't recall seeing ..." which unless you were around or have really extensive digital (or microfilm/microfiche etc). Or else you're opining what really is very much (as you put it) a "belief".
2) Red is generally regarded as canny. He knew who he could get on and dog and who he had to placate. And for instance he's pretty open about being deliberately vague about disciplining players in advance because he wouldn't have to be inconsistent and he wouldn't have to sacrifice good players (see, for instance p14 Ever Green). My reading/recollection suggests he was willing and happy to dog Heinsohn because he knew Heinsohn "could take it", that it would roll off him. I'm somewhat confident in believing Russell and Cousy ... would be two that he would ... not so easily criticize, even within the closed environs of the team, never mind in public.
3) Fwiw, in terms of anecdotal stuff, in John Taylor's telling/illustration of the idea of the "Hey Bill" defense (The Rivalry, p79) and granting it's talking about how it let Boston's exterior players play tight and in the example Cousy play his man close ... it's not clear whether or not the choice of Cousy as the guy who gets beat and shouts "Hey, Bill" is coincidental.
Hagan side
1) On Hagan ... I recall there was a quote earlier, one, that also, iirc, said Pettit wasn't a superstar ... I'm not sure I trust that as well, honestly given the superstar comment as I recall it, anything whatsoever. My limited impression, mainly via recollecting books didn't see him as a a standout versus peers either way on that end. Where one could perhaps see traction on that end implicitly (via net impact) is via ...
2) I think I made less of the WoWY stuff than you, particularly with some of the samples but
cumulatively do understand why in a tight field, it looked bad enough to send him ... tumbling? As you noted earlier his getting on the board as early as he did was a rise though I think you missed that he did make the project last time.
Got to leave it here. I don't think I'm anti-Cousy per-se though even here and now probably lower than most. But I'm not
looking to argue against him ... I'm just probably more sympathetic versus norms to Sharman and have thus tended to come from that angle. As I say, there's significant uncertainty on the older guys.