Dr Spaceman wrote:I'm going to nitpick here, as this is a major point of contention for me. Jordan is the greatest scorer/ offensive force to ever play. But calling him the GOAT offensive player in the sense that Russell is the GOAT defender doesn't pass the test for me.
We have mountains of evidence stating that Bill Russell was the best defender ever. For one, he was a defensive force in the way Jordan was an offensive force. He was a terror, and severely limited/intimidated pretty much every center he ever went up against. The fact is, Wilt Chamberlain consistently played worse against him and consistently lost to him in terms of individual matchups. It's a common theme, people just could not beat Bill, and he dominated in a way we've never seen since.
But let's look to another main support of Russell: he led SEVERAL of the greatest defensive teams of all time. ElGee and fpliii have made this case, but no one's defensive impact more directly translated into team defensive efficacy than Russell. We've seen great defenders come and go, but none of them have come close to pulling their teams to the heights Russell's teams consistently did. And here's where Jordan's case gets hairy: you can't say the same for him on offense. In fact, you can very clearly say that Magic Johnson's offensive contribution weighted more heavily on his team's success. Note I'm not talking about winning, I'm talking about team offensive performance as a whole, where Jordan can't claim to be the GOAT. we can say he could have led GOAT offenses, but it never really happened. And in fact, we've seen players like Nash and James, who both take a more "hands on" approach to team offense, pull their teams to greater heights than the Jordan's Bulls ever reached.
And then there's exploitability. Although few in number, there were times when teams were able to limit Jordan's offensive impact. I'm talking specifically about the pistons here, as they quite clearly had a blueprint for dealing with him. Granted, he dismantled it later in his career, but it still existed. Russell never had such deficiencies. Nobody ever figured out how to beat him. Ever. Until he retired, his defense was basically the most consistent thing outside death and taxes. You can point to coaching and strategy, which is fair, but the point is nobody ever figured out Russell. He was probably he most adaptable players ever, and could just change his strategy in a heartbeat to counter whatever the offense was doing. This is a primary reason his contemporaries treat him with such reverence.
I can't get behind claiming Jordan as the offensive GOAT in the same sense as Russell being the defensive GOAT. His offensive impact frankly just doesn't hold up to the same scrutiny we use to evaluate Russell.
There are certainly a lot of great points here, and for what it's worth, I agree that Jordan as the GOAT offensive player is debatable - I think that Magic's (or Oscar's, or Nash's) teams being the #1 offense in the league (in terms of ORtg, and for Nash, we also have RAPM data that absolutely confirms his reputation, and shows that it's clearly him who should be credited for PHX top offensive squads), but MJ made very strong offensive impact even in his twilight years (about +4 on O in both 1997 and '98), and it actually DID translate to great team offense (1st in ORtg in '97, and 9th in '98, with Pippen missing a half of that season), plus 3 other seasons when the Bulls had the best offense in the league - 1991, 1992 and 1996 (and 2nd in 1993, 5th in 1990).
That being said, it's necessarily what I want to argue here - I think looking at team ORtg doesn't always have to be a reliable way of determining how big an individual player's impact really is - team strategy obviously varies greatly depending on what kind of personnel they have - Jordan's Bulls (or LeBron's Cavs and Heat, too) were usually well-balanced between offense and defense, while Magic's Lakers, Oscar's Royals, or Nash's Suns had to excel on one end of the court (offense) to be relevant, because they lacked defensive talent (Lakers often had solid defensive teams, but were still heavily offense-oriented, they just had so much talent on their roster that they could be #1 offensive team, and still top 10 on D), while Jordan's or LeBron's team had more flexibility (their individual superiority defensively also had a lot to do with that).
I think that having an elite, offensively dominant PG like Magic, Oscar or Nash and letting them run the show is the most reliable, textbook way to build a great offensive team, and I admit that it's likely easier to build a truly dominant offensive team around a PG, than a more iso-heavy elite offensive player like Jordan, LeBron or Kobe, because it's going to guarantee that there will be great flow to your offense, and it'll be more difficult to come up with a good gameplan to stop an offense like that, where basically all 5 guys on the floor are usually more or less a threat to score, but I think that having an ISO wing like MJ, Kobe, even LeBron, can be extremely helpful against elite defensive teams, when you often can't count on your offense system to work smoothly, and need someone who can score a lot of points efficiently on their own, so I think that on average it might give you more of an advantage in the playoffs, and as far as Jordan/LeBron (I think LBJ is in the same boat as MJ as an offensive player, in the sense that his teams were never really the best in the league offensively - usually very good, or even elite, top 5 level, since he entered his true prime in '09, but not #1) - I think that MJ's/LBJ's boxscore-based metrics, and their volume/efficiency combination, helps to make a strong case for both guys (Shaq may probably be mentioned in the same category).
So, to sum up what I suppose to be a rather unclear analysis, I'd say that Jordan's case as the GOAT may be based more on his individual brilliance (which is almost second to none in terms of volume and efficiency, maybe even more in the postseason than regular season), than him perennially leading the best offensive teams in the league (although he did that 3 times, too).
I guess we could simply agree on Jordan being the best scorer, and one of the best offensive players instead of the best offensive player, right?
BTW - it's admirable to see a Bulls fan arguing for Russell, against Jordan, so ardently.
