dhsilv2 wrote:WarriorGM wrote:tsherkin wrote:
So that's one decade.
But from 1950 to 1990, how many scoring champs won the title? Mikan did it in 1950. Then it next ALMOST happened in 67, when Rick Barry's Warriors lost in the Finals. It was Kareem's 71 Bucks when it next actually happened after the 1950 Lakers. So, a shade over 20 years. If you care about the ABA, it happened with Dr J's 74 Nets and again in 76 (though tbf that was also over 2 series).
Then we don't see it again until the 90s with Jordan, who did it 6 times.
Then we see it with Shaq in 2000, and haven't seen it since. There are guys who won scoring titles and then won titles, but they haven't done it in the same season since Shaq. Scoring ability is very different from actually doing it during a title season. Kobe, for example, played differently in 08-10 than he did in 06 and 07. And KD has been the George Gervin of our era, leastwise outside of his time with the Warriors when he was winning titles and NOT winning scoring titles.
So yeah, it's been almost a quarter century since we have seen a season in which a player won the scoring title AND won a title.
So the decade cross-section you looked at actually isn't all that relevant.
You seem to miss ballzboyee's point. A scoring title may not be very predictive of winning a championship the year the scoring title is claimed but it does seem predictive of winning titles eventually.
From 1950 to 1990 how many scoring champions won a championship? The majority.
If we pulled all nba first team or even second team, I'd guess we'd see the majority won titles. We know the MVP overwhelmingly correlates with winning a title.
The scoring title correlates in the sense that most guys with it, had long careers and most guys with long careers eventually can get a title.
Blaze pointed out a few recent guys, but just go back a few more years. AI, Tmac, Westbrook, and Melo never won. Wade and Robinson has to be paired with younger multie time MVP's. And in recent years still no ring for Embiid, Harden, or Doncic (he's still really young). Throw in KD had to team up with Curry another scoring champ on the list.
Since 2001 the only scoring champ to win a title as their team's clear best player/scorer are Lebron, Curry, and Kobe. if I go back to 1980 All I add is Shaq and Jordan.
Meanwhile here are some names not on this list
Jokic
Giannis
Dirk
Duncan
KG
Hakeem
Magic
Bird
Russell
Moses
Walton
MVP and All-NBA are media awards and they are also announced after the season. They are subjective. The Scoring Title is a statistical fact. Like I said, 22 out of that of the last 33 NBA Champs have had a scoring title winner on that team. Some of your examples of players who did not win a scoring title also had scoring champs on their teams when they won. Magic had Kareem. Duncan had David Robinson. Hakeem finished runner-up multiple years and would have had several scoring titles if not for Jordan and Shaq. Moses Malone finished runner-up multiple times to George Gervin and Adrian Dantley -- two of the most prolific scorers of all-time. Larry Bird finished running-up to Bernard King and played on the same team with other prolific scorers Kevin McHale, Parish, and Dennis Johnson. Bird would have almost certainly won a scoring title if he had not been on such stacked dynasty in the 80's. I could say the same thing for Magic. Magic could have won a scoring title if he really had wanted to do so. He easily could have averaged 30+ ppg in the 1980's, but he chose to be a god-like facilitator instead. It seems to me that it is kind of a truism that if a team has the most dominant scorer in the league, they are going to win. I don't feel like anybody would seriously question this point in hockey, soccer, or baseball where it is +1 a run or goal at a time. It is way more obvious the impact of a dominant scorers in those sports. I think the volume of the scoring in basketball somehow tricks people into thinking that having the most dominant scorer is somehow less important. Scoring the ball is by far the most important skill in basketball and other sports. Dominant scorers win.