Post#48 » by 70sFan » Tue Aug 13, 2024 9:47 am
Player of the Year
1. Bill Russell - Russell reached his true peak-ish region this season, which is nothing short of a GOAT-level tier. He led an all-time defense throughout the RS (-5.9 rDRtg) and PS (-5.8 rDRtg), which is the teaser for the next decade. On top of that, Russell kept expanding his offensive game, having his best scoring and passing year up to that point. There are reasons to believe that it was the finest scoring season of Russell's career (though I'd put 1962 above it based on PS performace), as it was the best season of his career both in terms of FG% and FT%. He finished with these scoring numbers (per thinkingbasketball.net):
1960 RS: 14.1 pp75 on +3.3 rTS%
1960 PS: 14.4 pp5 on +5.6 rTS%
These are solid numbers. Considering his all-time level defensive impact and clear positive offensive contribution, I can't have him any lower. He still wasn't overtaxed with playmaking duties, as Cousy was still in his prime form, but he showed signs of improvement. In the playoffs, he outplayed rookie Wilt and was clearly the best player in the close finals series.
2. Wilt Chamberlain - one of the best rookie seasons of all-time. Chamberlain averaged 27.2 pp75 on +3.0 rTS% in RS, but his scoring arguably wasn't the most impactful aspect of his game - he also anchored -4.5 rDRtg defense, good enough for clearly 2nd best in the league (the Warriors were not good defensively before him). Some people question Wilt's postseason production, but his scoring numbers were still phenomenal during that run: 24.6 pp75 on +4.4 rTS% and this includes an unfortunate situation in the Celtics series.
I don't think he challenges Russell in his first 2 seasons, but he already accomplished enough to put him ahead of the other POY candidates.
3. Bob Pettit
4. Elgin Baylor
5. Dolph Schayes
The three forwards are extremely hard to put in the right order for me. Pettit seems to be the most consistent throughout the season, Baylor and Schayes were spectacular in the playoffs but in limited sample, it's not like Pettit didn't deliver in the postseason either. Here are the basic scoring stats and team offensive results:
Pettit: 23.1 pp75 on +4.7 rTS% in RS (+2.5 rORtg), 22.7 pp75 on +5.7 rTS% in PS (+1.1 rORtg)
Baylor: 25.7 pp75 on +2.6 rTS% in RS (-2.6 rORtg), 26.4 pp75 on +8.8 rTS% in PS (+0.2 rORtg)
Schayes: 21.4 pp75 on +3.3 rTS% in RS (+2.0 rORtg), 23.8 pp75 on +9.0 rTS% in PS (-0.5 rORtg)
I decided to put them in this order, but I am willing to change my choice.
HM: Cliff Hagan, Richie Guerin, Bob Cousy - to be honest, none of them are even remotely close to the top 5.
Offensive Player of the Year
1. Elgin Baylor - Derives most of his impact on offense. Just a huge PS and a massive carryjob.
2. Bob Pettit - Led the #1 offense. Very efficient.
3. Dolph Schayes - Not a lot of offensive impact but his floor raising is still valuable. 37.6 ppg on +3.0 rTS is still valuable on a middling offensive team.
HM: Wilt Chamberlain, Richie Guerin
Defensive Player of the Year
1. Bill Russell - easy choice.
2. Wilt Chamberlain - another easy choice
3. Walter Dukes - don't see any other quality candidate, it's between him and Woody for me.[/quote]