IlikeSHAIguys wrote:Maybe Bird was really the best but I can't just go off you saying he is.
This has been my biggest frustration with this year. I think it is
fine to take the “MVP + Finals MVP = RPoY” approach. For the most part, that will not garner too much opposition; the by far worst example of that is 1970 Willis Reed, and he is still a reasonable choice.
… But for a discussion to have enduring value, it cannot
just be that. That approach says nothing about the game. It is one thing when we all collectively go that way in 1950 when no footage is available, but everyone here at minimum can watch Finals and conference finals games from this year. We can see what these players do and judge them ourselves without blindly relying on reputation or box scores or distant memories.
Despite that, I feel like the Bird arguments this year have been a retrain of what they were in 2010:
1. Bird -Obvious IMO
Bird is the obvious #1. By the end of '86 he was getting GOAT arguments, nearly averaged a triple double in the Finals.
Larry Bird is an easy choice at number one.
1. Larry Bird - Won League MVP and Finals MVP, Led the league in Win Shares and Win Shares PER 48 minutes and PER. Led in Win Shares in the playoffs and finished 2nd in Win Shares per 48 minutes and 4th in PER in the playoffs.
For all Bird's hype as the ultimate team player, I think this is the year where he superseded and thus extirpated his own cachet; he ruled the league, period.
The irony of Bird's dominance is, of course, that his team was stacked. Bird's presence was close to being bigger than the league, or its stand-in through personification, but for all his individual greatness this would have been likely a non-starter without that team.
Saw that with Jordan's frustrations, and how overlooked even Air could be when put on a lacking roster.
Context as conflation and, from that, confusion. Bird was Bird because of Boston, and vice versa. Simplified. Not altogether true, but partially so on perception.
No question, he was the man. Team helped to put him in position, but so few have ever excelled to such a level when given the opportunity.
Logo Redux. Either bigger than the league's image, or just that.
I see… basically no discussion of the basketball being played. This is by reputation one of the forum’s banner projects, and one which up to now has individually been immortalised more than any single Top 100 project, and all anyone can say about Bird are variations on “obvious #1, he was the man, nice box score on GOAT team.” Not every vote needs a high effort explanation, but if
no one can even
gesture at any real analysis, what exactly does that say about the true strength of that player’s case? This is not a random fifth place pity vote; this is “peak Larry Bird” (ostensibly). And no one voting him #1 has anything to say about what he was doing on the court
relative to his competition?
Somehow the most affirmative Bird case we have thus far, across
fifteen years of this project, is my tongue-in-cheek joke that Bird’s sheer presence could have conceivably made his entire team shoot and rebound better than the Lakers did with Magic. With that type of “support”, I am not surprised several voters feel disillusioned or outright dismissive of that type of treatment on a “player
comparisons” board.