Biff wrote:And before anyone points anything further out, let's keep in mind that Russell's teams averaged around 110 shots a game. Duncan's in the low 60's. It kind of explains the incredibly inflated rebounding numbers, yeah?
Just for kicks I decided to pace adjust Russell's 63-64 so that they're the same as Duncan's 04-05 pace.
Raw stats: 15 points, 24.7 rebounds, 4.7 assists
Russell: 44 minutes, 10.6 points, 17.5 rebounds, 3.3 assists / Duncan: 33 minutes, 20.3 points, 11.1 rebounds 2.7 assists
Per 36
Russell: 8.6 points, 14.3 rebounds, 2.7 assists / Duncan: 22.1 points, 12.1 rebounds, 2.9 assists
And for fun let's bring Duncan's to 44 minutes and adjust his pace to the same as the Celtics from 63-64.
38 points, 20.8 rebounds, 5 assists
It's very hard to compare eras. What we're talking about is a good example:
Pace increases some numbers and decreases others. Duncan wouldn't get the same percentages if he's playing the sprint game.
If the old players slowed down, played fewer minutes, and rested more, they'd have higher shooting percentages. The style was so different, all the numbers would change.
If the current players sprinted non-stop like they used to, and played longer minutes, they'd have lower shooting percentages. Most current players could not handle the speed and physical demands of that style without significantly building up to it.
Imagine Duncan playing 25% more minutes and running 25% faster on every play. That would dramatically change his game.
Pace was used as a weapon back then. It was a strategy to defeat the opponent both by beating them down the court, and sapping their strength in the 4th quarter. No player was smarter at using it than Russell. He was a genius.
He didn't win simply because of his incredible speed, length, timing and leaping ability. He won because he set his opponent up to fail physically or mentally at key moments. Speed was the main weapon. Inducing fatigue in the opponent was a plan. Russell was brilliant at it.