OldSchoolNoBull wrote:
And that higher efficiency is accomplished while
a)shooting 41.1% 3P on 3.1 attempts per game while Hakeem was scoring all of his points inside
and
I'm not sure how this is a positive for Bird here. His true-shooting being built on wide-open looks while Hakeem is scoring a bunch facing multiple defenders would be a positive point for Hakeem, not Bird. It's also worth considering the finals has hakeem having to go on mchale and parish and walton while bird has the benefit of hakeem being occupied by parish and mchale being occupied by sampson. In such a circumstance even equal scorers should be expected to have differing efficiency.
Well two of the trackers have been looking at quality as well and Bird doesn't do too well there either. The core assumption behind all of these is that the essence of playmaking is removing variables that may otherwise hinder your team from scoring, and the most prominent variable there is defenders.As for creation/playmaking - I appreciate the effort that is put into tracking this stuff, but my instinct is that not all creation is the same. When you're talking about a center for whom the nature of his creation is using his gravity to draw the defense inward and then passing the ball back out, and a wing who has to move around with the ball, dribble, and pass outside-in(or side-to-side) to create, it strikes me as comparing apples to oranges. It's like two different skillsets entirely.
I'd also say what you're describing more accurate describes Mchale. Bird is barely handling the ball at all. Offensively he's basically a PF. He then plays small-forward defensively because he offers very little in the way of paint-protection.
If we are going to compare the apples to the oranges though - while I fully understand that there's more to creation and playmaking than assists, it strikes me as wrong to simply ignore the chasm of their a:t ratios. Bird recorded a >2:1 ratio in the RS and a >3:1 ratio in the PO, while Hakeem turned the ball over more than he assisted in both RS and PO:
Bird RS: 8.5:4.1, PO: 9.4:3.0
Hakeem RS: 2.0:2.9, PO: 2.0:2.2
I mean, the assists are also being looked at here in ceo, rff, and lebronny's tracking. But ultimately assists aren't really useful beyond their ability to reflect creation so, if Bird, regardless of his assists, isn't creating much more, I don't really see Hakeem having less turnovers, without his team's starting point guard, as a positive for him. Hakeem is facing more defensive attention, a more difficult offensive assignment and turning the ball over less.
and being in the same ballpark on the boards despite being three inches shorter and playing next to good rebounders in McHale and Parish?
Yeah, see I think what's happening is pretty much the opposite. Bird is getting rebounds because he has two teammates sealing off the Rockets best rebounders while Hakeem is dealing with the Celtic's best rebounders. Catching the ball is cool, but i'd say the most value comes from the sealing off other potential rebounders, not simply being there to catch it. I don't think Bird is in Hakeem's ballpark at all there. Hakeem is sealing-off mchale/parish/waltonn allowing sampsons and mcrays to get rebounds. Bird isn't sealing off hakeem or sampson for mchale or parish.
That he was the focal point of what is held by most as one of the greatest teams ever that, in their four wins in the Finals, had an average MOV of 13.5ppg over Hakeem's team?
I mean, I don't see why we'd exclude the losses. The Rockets play the Celtics far closer than any other team did and steal a game despite Hakeem's best teammate going out. Also you say he's the focal point but it's worth remebering the offense was worse in 86. What made them an all-time team was their defense and Bird is the least involved man defender, offers minimal rim-protection, and so far in tracking is still registering more negative plays than positive.
I fully understand the arguments in favor of Hakeem - that he's the superior defender, that what he accomplished is more impressive because he did it with less, etc - I just don't agree that they put him over Bird in 86. I don't think anyone's changing their minds at this point, though, and I am unsurprised at the result given this forum seems to be, relative to the general basketball-following population, super-duper high on guys like Hakeem and Duncan and Garnett and relatively lukewarm on guys like Bird and Shaq and even Magic.
Eh?
Magic gained 3 additional POY-wins (5 overall) and notched one of the only three-unanimous POYs from 1975-1999 with prime Hakeem, Jordan, and Bird as competition. The top 100 was low on Magic I guess (longevity), but I don't think the RPOY has been. Magic has been treated like the best player of the 80s and I think that's higher relative to general-basketball-followers who see Bird as the best.