bastillon wrote:tsherkin what's your take on Magic vs Oscar ?
Magic exists because of Oscar, in a way.
I'm inclined to take Magic, because I think he was a far more dynamic passer, and I think Oscar over-used the ball in his day, personally. Also, I know that his raw numbers are pace- and minutes-inflated.
However, even if you adjust his minutes to more reasonable numbers for the post-60s/early 70s, he was still a 25/7/9 player in his prime, at a shot rate that he'd be able to match in the modern era and he was an excellent FT shooter who was amazing at drawing fouls because he was a cunning monster in that respect.
I respect what Oscar did. I still think I'd take Magic. He was, as terrifying as it is, more efficient and a better passer in my opinion, and a similar rebounder. I think it's pretty clear that Oscar was a better overall scorer, and that he had a lot more 2 in him than 1, but because he was so good and used the ball so much, he was also really good at posting assists. And to begin with, he had all the fundamentals mastered, so he was also a very good passer.
Oscar Robertson taught me basketball, FWIW. Not, you know, personally, but one of the books he wrote was the basis of how I developed my game. It was later, as I watched Magic and Bird at the end of their careers (and then pouring over video of their careers after), that I added those elements, but Oscar's fundamental development is about as good as it gets as a template for any player because he really didn't have a weakness, per se. He didn't have West's shooting ability, but you sure as Hell didn't want to leave him open at ranges we now refer to as "under the arc." 21 feet and in, good luck with that. Great post game, always taking that extra inch towards the basket, faking everyone out, etc. Really cerebral player.
I'd probably have a different opinion of Oscar v Magic if I hadn't grown up watching Magic win basically every other year (slightly more often, actually), essentially. And if Oscar hadn't run into the unstoppable Wilt and the immovable Russell through the prime of his career. And of course, he earned the hell out of all of those FTAs.
I have deep respect for Oscar, is I guess what I'm saying. I think I'd still take Magic, because I like his approach to the game better than younger Oscar... but clearly, the Big O was capable of adapting to different situations, because his impact in Milwaukee was evident and large.
But damn if it isn't a hard choice. There's an evident leap forward in Cinci's scoring when he arrived as a rookie. PPG is always a fickle thing to use, even team PPG, but he had around a +2.9 SRS impact on a crappy team in only 71 games. The year after, with him playing 8 more games, they made ANOTHER roughly +4.3 leap in SRS. The overall SRS wasn't that great, but that kind of impact is a little hard to ignore.
I dunno, man. Oscar was dope. Magic is my favorite player ever, so I'm hella biased, but Oscar does need his respect.