Doctor MJ wrote:You make a good point. On the other hand, the Lakers probably get just as far in the playoff with only giving the equivalent of his injury-riddle regular season *and* to be honest, I really wary of using the "Player X was better, he just had a weaker supporting cast" argument against Russell. I'll be spending a good amount of time thinking it over.
In some cases, I think that was definitely the case. But it would be hard to argue Wilt had the weaker cast that year. A lot of things happened in that series -- two incredibly lucky shots for the Celtics, West's injury, the Van Breda Kolff/Chamberlain feud flaring up at the worst possible time -- but I don't think it's unfair to say the Lakers squandered a golden opportunity.
It was right there for the taking, and they couldn't get it done.
Beyond that, rating Russell in general is probably going to be the toughest part of this whole project. I'm already wrestling with the debate versus him and Chamberlain.
I feel like I've locked myself into to a certain camp, having championed Kareem for so many seasons, and thinking that Wilt was generally given an unfair rap throughout his career.
I also feel like Russell was more blessed than anybody in history in terms of his supporting cast -- Hall of Famers at SF and SG throughout his career, Hall of Fame PG for about half, numerous other All-Stars, plus arguably the greatest coach/general manager ever.
At the same time, he clearly made his teams better, and impacted the game, in ways that cannot be measured, while Wilt seems to have had the exact opposite effect. It's just so hard to gauge such things.
I've read three or four books on the subjects, filled with opinions of people a lot smarter and more experienced than we all are regarding basketball, and even they can't come to a consensus on who was better. I'm looking forward to seeing what everybody else has to say on the subject.
One thing I do know -- I'm taking Bill Simmons' case with a gigantic grain of salt.