infinite11285 wrote:I strongly reject the claim that Wilt was a loser simply because he often lost to the guy with the better team.
Swap their rosters, and the results flip. Everyone loves to call basketball a “team sport,” but that truth conveniently disappears when it’s time to give credit—or assign blame.
Wilt wasn't a "loser." His teams twice set the record for most wins in a season and he won a total of 2 rings those same years. Wilt is the greatest talent to step on to a basketball court.
We don't have to hypothesize about Wilt being on a better team than Russell. We can simply examine when Wilt had home court advantage in their playoff matchups:
-'66: Philly has 1 more win and home court, but
lost 4-1 to the Celtics.
-'67: Philly sets the record for most wins in a season with 68, which is 8 more wins than Boston. They
won over the Celtics 4-1.
-'68: Philly wins 62 games, again 8 more wins than Boston. They go up 3-1 on Boston, but then
lost to the Celtics 4-3.
-'69: The Celtics get the #4 seed in the East while the Lakers secure the #1 seed in the West. They face each other in the Finals, the Lakers go up 3-2 but then
lost the next two. Russell's team became the lowest seed ever to win a ring. Besides Hakeem's #6 Rockets, every NBA champion has had a higher rank.
4 times when Wilt had the advantage over Russell, he went 1-3. Russell was mostly on good to great teams, agreed. But when he wasn't, his teams still managed to perform well above expectations in the playoffs. Thus, I can't agree with the claim that if they swapped teams we'd have the same results.
Bear with me, but Russell's defensive dominance relative to the entire league is not properly understood. For context, here are the 20 best seasons of Offensive Win Shares:
KAJ has #1 and #4 but no other spots. Wilt has 3 spots. MJ has 3, but none in the top 10. Mikan has 3 in the top 10. No single player dominates the list. In fact, the difference between the #1 season and the #20 season is 3.7 Win Shares. This is expected, as the NBA has seen tons of talent over the decades. Why should any one player dominate over his peers when the talent pool is so deep.
Now let's look at Defensive Win Shares:
Russell has the top 6 seasons and 10 of the top 20. If you recall, no one had more than 3 of the top 20 spots for OWS. Wilt was a defensive beast and he has #7, #8, and #17 (3 of the top 20). If Wilt was a defensive beast, then Russell was way more than that. Russell's best season is 5.23 WS better than Wilt's best season! The difference between #1 and #20 is 7.8 Win Shares, more than twice that of the gap we saw with OWS. Take Russell's seasons out and the gap between #7 (Wilt's best season) and the season 20 spots down from there is a more reasonable 2.8 WS.
Russell is a crazy outlier on defense, even compared to Wilt.