Re: Oscar vs WestI went back and looked at my RPoY vote, and I had Oscar voted ahead of West every year from 1961 - 1969. The good thing with that project was that we went through year-to-year, and even beyond the limited B-R stats that are available, we had guys like ThaRegulator pulling up all types of old articles from that time period that even gave us a few individual games, especially in the postseason, and semi-sentient compiling the regular and postseason data + MVP vote in easy to read tables. I think the tendency in projects like this top-100 list is to go too broad. To focus so much on career trends that we tend to miss important details. My voting record on Oscar and West definitely was not the project consensus, but at least I can post my votes and rationales to give a general idea for why I have Oscar rated higher overall.
1961: Oscar 4th, West not voted, (Elgin Baylor 2nd).
The order here wasn't controversial at all, as Oscar was already a star and Jerry really wasn't yet. But it's important to note Elgin's ranking here, because for at least a portion of the 60s the Lakers were more "Elgin's team" than "Jerry's team", which had ramifications to me in the Oscar vs West question.
1962: Oscar 3rd, West not voted, (Elgin Baylor 4th)
Here is what Semi-sentient had for the stats/MVP vote of 1962:
Regular SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 76 45.2 18.9 .489 23.6 4.5
Wilt Chamberlain 80 48.5* 50.4* .536 25.7* 2.4
Oscar Robertson 79 44.3 30.8 .554 12.5 11.4*
Elgin Baylor 48 44.4 38.3 .492 18.6 4.6
Jerry West 75 41.2 30.8 .524 7.9 5.4
Post SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 14 48.0* 22.4 .519 26.4 5.0
Wilt Chamberlain 12 48.0* 35.0 .508 26.6* 3.1
Oscar Robertson 4 46.3 28.8 .519 11.0 11.0*
Elgin Baylor 13 43.9 38.6* .503 17.7 3.6
Jerry West 13 42.8 31.5 .544 6.8 4.4
Awards Recognition / MiscCode: Select all
Player MVP All-NBA Team Record
===============================================
Bill Russell 1st 2nd 60-20*
Wilt Chamberlain 2nd 1st 49-31
Oscar Robertson 3rd 1st 43-37
Elgin Baylor 4th 1st 54-26
Jerry West 5th 1st 54-26
It seemed to me that both Oscar and Elgin still had a clear advantage on West in both the regular (*caveat for Elgin's military service/missed games) and post-season.
1963: Oscar 2nd, Elgin 4th, West not voted
Here are semi-sentient's stats for the season:
Regular SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 78 44.9 16.8 .464 23.6 4.5
Oscar Robertson 80 44.0 28.3 .588 10.4 9.5
Wilt Chamberlain 80 47.6* 44.8* .550 24.3* 3.4
Elgin Baylor 80 42.1 34.0 .519 14.3 4.8
Bob Pettit 79 39.1 28.4 .525 15.1 3.1
Jerry West 55 39.3 27.1 .523 7.0 5.6
Post SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 13 47.5 20.3 .508 25.1* 5.1
Oscar Robertson 12 47.5* 31.8 .574 13.0 9.0*
Wilt Chamberlain ------------------------------------
Elgin Baylor 13 43.2 32.6* .508 13.6 4.5
Bob Pettit 11 42.1 31.8 .543 15.1 3.0
Jerry West 13 41.4 27.8 .548 8.2 4.7
Awards Recognition / MiscCode: Select all
Player MVP All-NBA Team Record
===============================================
Bill Russell 1st 1st 58-22*
Oscar Robertson 3rd 1st 42-38
Wilt Chamberlain 7th 2nd 31-49
Elgin Baylor 2nd 1st 53-27
Bob Pettit 4th 1st 48-32
Jerry West 5th 1st 53-27
Another easy win for Oscar. Better player in regular and postseason, and West played only 55 games. (Side note: this also speaks to the dearth of dominant players of the era. West was 5th in the MVP vote despite playing only 55 games, just like Baylor was 4th in the '62 vote despite playing in only 48 games. Hard to imagine a player even finishing with a single MVP vote these days if they missed so many games).
1964: Oscar 3rd, West 5th
This was Oscar's MVP year, and another comfortable win over West. I'll post semi's season stats below, but Oscar was still better in both the regular and post season.
* = led the league
Regular SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 78 44.6 15.0 .461 24.7* 4.7
Jerry West 72 40.4 28.7 .562 6.0 5.6
Oscar Robertson 79 45.1 31.4 .576 9.9 11.0*
Wilt Chamberlain 80 46.1* 36.9* .537 22.3 5.0
Bob Pettit 80 41.2 27.4 .535 15.3 3.2
Post SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST
=======================================================
Bill Russell 10 45.1 13.1 .406 27.2* 4.4
Jerry West 5 41.2 31.2 .564 7.2 3.4
Oscar Robertson 10 47.1* 29.3 .568* 8.9 8.4*
Wilt Chamberlain 12* 46.5 34.7* .543 25.2 3.3
Bob Pettit 12* 41.2 21.0 .483 14.5 2.8
Awards Recognition / MiscCode: Select all
Player MVP All-NBA Team Record
===============================================
Bill Russell 3rd 2nd 59-21*
Jerry West 5th 1st 42-38
Oscar Robertson 1st 1st 55-25
Wilt Chamberlain 2nd 1st 48-32
Bob Pettit 4th 1st 46-34
1965: Oscar 3rd, West 4th
This was reaching the period where every vote between Oscar and West was a razor thin margin. I don't see semi's stats review in that thread, but here is part of what I wrote in my rationale (note: the RPoY project was done in reverse chronological order, so you'll see me often say "again" in my discussion because I had said similar things in the 1966 thread, which I'll post my rationale for below):
"I need to take a hard look at West vs Oscar. Because once again, the Royals and the Lakers look like carbon-copy teams except that one played in an extremely weak conference and the other was in the same league with the 2 best teams (and players) in the league. That still isn't, of itself, a virtue that should go in an individual player's camp. And once again, by general comparison tools West and Oscar look extremely similar. In the regular season they finished next to each other by a razor-thin margin in the MVP vote and statistically were just as even. Their teams had almost identical records and SRS. Just no difference. And in the postseason...still, no difference that I can see. In the effort to keep the playing field level, this is what I've been able to gather about how West and Oscar played against the Celtics and Sixers respectively (2 best postseason teams, 2 best defenses):
West against Boston: 34 points per game (only stat I have for every game), one game with five boards and five assists, one game with 12 boards, and that he shot 18-for-52 (34%) from the field in the last two games of the series (thanks to Regul8tor's articles for those numbers).
Oscar against Philly: 28 points, 12 assists, 5 rebounds per game on 43% FG and 53% TS.
The curse of this project continues to be the loss of information through the years. But again, I still see nothing to conclude that West was suddenly a better player than Oscar in the postseason. With the variables that they can control, it seems to me that West vs Oscar in '65 looks exactly like it did in '66...essentially a tie. And just like in '66, my tie-breaker is that Oscar has to carry a larger offensive load than West does as both the primary point-scorer and almost exclusive offense initiator on his team. As such, Oscar wins my tiebreaker again."
1966: Oscar 3rd, West 4th
Here was my rationale, heavily emphasized by the news clippings that TheRegulator gathered:
"My 3rd/4th place will come down to West and Oscar. And once again, from what I can tell the difference between them is razor thin. In the regular season both averaged 31.3 ppg, were 2/3 overall in PER, and 2/3 overall in win shares. Both led their teams to 45 - 35 records in the regular season. But here is where their differing circumstances start to play in a bit. The Lakers' reward for their 45 - 35 finish was a first round bye and a second round matchup with the 36-win Hawks. The Royals' reward for their 45 - 35 finish was a first-round matchup against the 7-time defending champion Celtics. A bit of inequity there.
As such, I can't really give West much credit for his team making the Finals while Oscar's went out in round 1. That's just luck of the draw. Fortunately, the Lakers and Royals both faced a common opponent in the postseason to help make some direct comparison of how they performed possible. And again, from what I can tell, there was little-to-nothing to separate them as individuals or in team results. From reading the articles that ThaRegul8tor posted, I see that West averaged 33.1 points against the Celtics. We already knew that Oscar averaged 31.8 points, and because this was his only playoff round we also know he averaged 7.8 assists, 7.6 boards, and shot 41% from the field. As far as I know, we don't have any of that peripheral info for West against the Celtics. But from those articles, I do get the feeling that on a game-to-game basis West and Oscar ultimately performed at a similar level both to each other and to what we might have expected from them based upon their regular seasons and the caliber of their opponents. And both squads stretched the Celtics out to the maximum number of games before their teams fell in the deciding game.
It's just too close for me to call definitively, based upon what info seems to be available from the time. Which leaves tie-breakers. And while even those are close, I can't escape the notion that Oscar was relied upon more heavily to drive the Royals offense than West was to drive the Lakers. Their scoring loads were similar, but while West led the Lakers in assists he shared the distributing duties more equally with Baylor and Rahman while Oscar was just about the only offense generator for the Royals. Seems to me that let West be set up for some of his offense, let him attack from the wing on occasion, while Oscar was almost always the one setting up either himself or others. With this being the case, I don't see enough of a separation in scoring/efficiency or even perimeter defense for West to make up for Oscar carrying the heavier load for the team's dominant unit. The gap is thin, but it's all that I have to try to separate the two."1967: I missed this vote, but in the overall project Oscar finished 2nd and West didn't rank at all. This was another of West's injury seasons, and was another comfortable win for Oscar.
1968: Oscar 4th, West not voted
Here are the stat summaries from semi-sentient:
* = led the league
Regular SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST PER WS
==================================================================
Wilt 82 46.8* 24.3 .557 23.8* 8.6 24.7* 20.4*
Greer 82 39.8 24.1 .529 5.4 4.5 17.1 11.2
Wilkins 82 38.6 20.0 .525 5.3 8.3 19.0 10.1
Baylor 77 39.3 26.0 .505 12.2 4.6 21.0 8.0
West 51 37.6 26.3 .590* 5.8 6.1 23.2 9.6
Robertson 65 42.5 29.2* .588 6.0 9.7* 24.6 12.3
Lucas 82 44.1 21.5 .565 19.0 3.1 19.8 10.1
Russell 78 37.9 12.5 .461 18.6 4.6 17.0 8.2
Havlicek 82 35.6 20.7 .486 6.7 4.7 17.7 7.6
Post SeasonCode: Select all
Player GP MIN PTS TS% REB AST PER WS
==================================================================
Wilt 13 48.5* 23.7 .511 24.7* 6.5 22.7 2.5
Greer 13 42.5 25.8 .512 6.1 4.2 17.6 1.7
Wilkins 6 39.5 18.3 .506 6.3 7.8* 16.8 0.5
Baylor 15 42.2 28.5 .503 14.5 4.0 23.0 1.9
West 15 41.5 30.8* .596 5.4 5.5 25.1* 3.6*
Robertson --------------------------------------------------
Lucas --------------------------------------------------
Russell 19 45.7 14.4 .458 22.8 5.2 16.7 1.6
Havlicek 19 45.4 25.9 .521 8.6 7.5 19.9 2.8
Awards Recognition / MiscCode: Select all
Player MVP All-NBA Team Record
=============================================
Wilt 1st 1st 62-20
Greer --- --- 62-20
Wilkins 2nd --- 56-26
Baylor 3rd 1st 52-30
West --- 2nd 52-30
Robertson 5th 1st 39-43
Lucas --- 1st 39-43
Russell --- 2nd 54-28
Havlicek --- 2nd 54-28
And here is part of my voting rationale:
"I agree with those arguments that put Baylor as the Laker that season over West, and Hondo's postseason probably gets him in. Between Oscar and West, Oscar missed half as much time and his team cratered when he was out while the Lakers were still solid. I understand this, as it just shows that the Lakers were already a good team so I'm not penalizing West for his team being good...more, this suggests to me that we shouldn't penalize Oscar for his team not doing as much as West's since they were obviously a lot more reliant upon him."1969: Oscar 2nd, West 3rd
This was another close vote, and could have gone either way. IIRC, most from the project put West over Oscar this season. For me, Wilt/West/Baylor kind of split the vote and I wasn't sure how to apportion credit for that Lakers team. In the vote I put West slightly above Wilt (which in hindsight I'm still not comfortable with) with Baylor as an HM, and Oscar snuck in at 2nd. Overall, though, as I mentioned it was a close vote.
Summary: So, from 1961 - 1969 I have Oscar over West all 9 seasons, 5 of which were comfortably clearly in Oscar's favor and 4 of which that were close margins that could have gone either way. After that season West had an excellent 1970 (won first in RPoY vote), Oscar edged West in the 1971 vote, and then West scraped a 5th place finish in 1972, then neither had another top-5 finish in the project as their careers wound down.
All told, it seems to me that Oscar and West were similar caliber players, but that in the years where there was separation it was much more often than not in Oscar's favor. West had a bit more team success, but he also had a better team, while Oscar was called upon to do more to carry his squad and, when given a championship caliber big, he turned himself into the perfect facilitator and helped lead that team to a championship. To me, it appears that Oscar is the solid choice over West in this project.