I know this is going to sound horrible, but Lew Alcindor had announced he was Muslim in late 1968, aligned himself with Elijah Muhammed in 1969...and probably didn't do as well in MVP/All-NBA voting as he should have in 1969-70. (Compare how Wes Unseld—a quiet, Christian black man—did in MVP voting in 1969 to Kareem in 1970. Hmmm.) I also think this played a part in Reed outpointing Frazier in MVP voting. I don't think there was a huge group of voters who were racist in the NBA, and it's not that Willis Reed was anything other than a terrific ballplayer. But the undercurrents were there and expressed, if subtly, and I do think there was a large enough minority to make for some bad voting from the late 60s into the early 1970s.
(You might want to have a look at the major story on Lew/Kareem that came out during the season at
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/ ... /index.htm Do you really think that the NBA was happy about a person with those attitudes leading the dynasty that took over from the Celtics?)
That being said—no, I don't have Kareem at #1 this year.
1. Jerry West. One of the best, if not the best, perimeter defenders in the league. 31 points a game on 50% shooting with terrific range. 7.5 assists a game in a league that gave fewer assists. Sacrificed his body to get the points—close to 11 FTA a game this year. Was just as good in the postseason.
A few notes about West in the Finals.
1) West was trying to help everyone out on defense and offense in this series, especially in game 7. Dean Garrett couldn't defend anyone. Elgin was shot (he went from 24 a game during the season to 19 in the playoffs leading up to the finals to 17.5 in the finals). Keith Erickson wasn't much help on D. So West was trying to cover multiple players; too much for anyone. And no one other than Jerry was hitting from the perimeter until the fourth quarter of Game 7, when it was all over 2) Prior to game 7, Frazier had been held to 14.5 ppg in the other six games, one of which West extended with his famous 55 footer. I don't know if anyone could have beaten the Knicks in Game 7—they played a perfect game—but I do think West won or extended games single handedly. 3) West was hurt too—bruised left hand in Game 3, either a badly bruised or broken right hand in Game 5. (This was why West didn't shoot in Game 5, btw.) He received painkilling shots in his each of his hands before both of the last two games. Frazier had the better game 7, but West had the better series and season. He's number one for me.
2. Lew Alcindor. The Bucks basically exchanged Len Chappell for a rookie Bob Dandirdge (close to a push), and Wayne Embry for Kareem. The other changes were minor...but, for the sake of argument, I'll say that the players other than Kareem improved the Bucks by 7-10 games between 1969 and 1970...which is a lot. The Bucks won 29 more games, which means Kareem was responsible for around 20 wins. Which figures, since he was second in the league in scoring, third in rebounding, and seventh in FG%. And he stepped it up in the postseason.
3. Walt Frazier. The difference between
statistically dominant and
most valuable is not always obvious. Walt Frazier was better than his numbers. Much better. The Knicks were his team, and they won a title. Did everything in whatever degrees were necessary to get his team to win...and win they did. That's my ultimate definition of value
4. Spencer Haywood. Has the eye-popping numbers...but he also had a perfect frontline (Byron Beck and Julius Keye) to support his style of play. As a matter of fact, the Nuggets had a good team that year. Still, Haywood was spectacular, and was a stud in the postseason. His game relied on speed and finesse more than strength, so I think he was probably at least as good in 1970 as he was at his peak in the NBA (and hadn't acquired quite the ego...yet). So I'll take him at #4.
5. Billy Cunningham. Was ona team with virtually no frontcourt; rebounded his a$$ off at SF, scored 26 a game, and passed the ball well. Not a great defender, but as good as Rick Barry—and a nicer guy. Smart player, adjusted his game to help his team.
HM: Reed (A very good player, but slightly overrated), Oscar (good team that didn't go anywhere with Oscar running it), Lou Hudson (a stud; think of a bigger, better Ray Allen), Mel Daniels (a lunch pail type of player; brought toughness every night, won a title)