ElGee wrote:My first question though would be (and apologies if I missed this): What's your analysis of the scale of Bird's superiority on defense? I am hesitant to use defense as a major factor for players who aren't superstars on that front, but yes, clearly if Bird has a big enough edge here, he should get the nod.
Trying to put in all on the numerical scale in SRS terms...
Magic is a +8 on offense. This is the best offensive player in NBA history.
Bird is a +7.5 on offense. This is the second best offensive player in NBA history.
I have Bird having 0.5-1.0 edge on defense.
Let's put the actually number on hold for a second. I've done enough analysis and seen enough basketball that I'm fairly comfortable calling these guys the two best offensive players ever. (Nash and Jordan would be the only contenders to me, and I've seen enough of them to also feel comfortable slotting them back...although the 3-point line and whatnot makes it interesting for Nash, and the lack thereof makes it interesting for West/Oscar. I digress...)
Defensively, Bird in 86 is going to be above a replacement player. And depending on which forward position he plays he's having positive impact with his help, positioning and rebounding. (Without McHale, Bird posted "defensive stats" matched by these 7 players http://bkref.com/tiny/NTVwa) Magic's defense seems like a minor negative, while I view Bird's defense as a minor positive. I'm not sure most people realize early Bird was actual quite a good defender.
So the real question is how far apart are they in offensive impact? Is it as close as I imagine? Clearly if Magic is out on an island, you can give the nod to Magic 87 over Bird 86. Well...
ORtg
Bos 85 +4.9 (+3.2)
Bos 86 +4.6 (+8.2 PS)
Bos 87 +5.2 (+8.5 PS)
Bos 88 +7.3 (+3.6 PS) (+7.9 after first 2 rounds)
Bos 89 (no Bird) +3.0 (-7.3 PS)
That's 3g in 89 against Detroit. In 88, the PS ORtg in the first two rounds was +7.9 before bone spurs started to hamper Bird in the Detroit series, and the offense went with him (-4.3 against Detroit).
ORtg
LAL 85 +6.2 (+9.8)
LAL 86 +6.1 (+6.4)
LAL 87 +7.3 (+10.5)
LAL 88 +5.0 (+7.8)
LAL 89 +6.0 (+9.1)
I'm posting these just so people realize how good both these teams were on offense, and to also note the 87 Lakers go higher than the best Celtic team.
But then again, how much of that is due to a desire to run/offensive strategy on LA's part? How much of that is due to teammate differences? For instance, the 87 Celtics were last in OREB% by a mile...suggesting a major emphasis on transition D. (Unless you want to find a way to make the argument that McHale-Parish-Bird are all-time bad OREB in that year.)
This broad perspective above clearly isn't enough to answer "how much better is Magic on offense," but I just want everyone to see how close these teams performed on this side of the ball across the peak years for these guys. I think it's clear the in/out numbers are evidence in Bird's favor on this front. And responding to my point 2 graphs above...the 88 Celtics with healthy McHale and Bird essentially peak higher on offense than any team in NBA history:
+9.4 ORtg -- would be 1st all-time
59.6% TS -- would be 1st all-time by 0.6%!
68.7% AST% -- 4th among 111+ offenses, behind *ahem assist inflation ahem* 3 Utah teams
And they do it with horrific OREB% and without surrounding Bird with 3-point shooters. I find this as impressive as anything Magic ever accomplished, and it's one of the pillars of evidence for trumpeting Bird's offense-savant portability.
So, I guess if you think you can drop Magic on any team and get a +8 to _9 offense without sacrificing much on defense, his portability isn't really an issue. OTOH, if you replace every PG ever and end up with something between +5 and +7 on offenses on the capable teams, you aren't having the same lift when he replaces good PG's.
Bird never really "replaces" anyone, since he can play so many different roles and play either forward position and his off-ball play is GOAT-like. So Bird can go to those good offenses, "replace" either forward (not many good offenses have 2 pivotal performing forwards, eh?), he gives you an upgrade over nearly every shooting 3, a massive spacing upgrade over every non-German 4 basically, and his passing would create GOAT-level ball movement and facilitate any kind of offense with the current PG. Much like I see Reggie Miller's amazing ability to help good offenses (something, sadly, we only saw from Reggie himself in International play, but have seen from similar off-ball Spacers), I think Bird is taking all the teams past the "Magical ceiling" if you will, and that matters to me a good deal because in trying to build dominant teams I care way more about how you perform on good teams than what you can salvage from bad ones. (Yes, in this case I'm calling 4-5 SRS teams "salvaged" bc/ they don't win many titles.)
None of that is enough for me to say "Bird = Magic on offense" (although frankly, how is that not a fair question??), but is it not enough to say how could Magic's offensive advantage be large enough to offset Bird's defensive advantage?
What is your SRS list for other players?