My quick responses to a reasonable argument
Doctor MJ wrote:colts18 wrote:From Elgee's in/out study. Wilt is 2nd worst among superstars in in/out
Player Years Games MOV Net SIO
Walton 77-78 41 9.3 13.0 11.2
Nash 01, 05-07, 09 36 5.6 9.5 7.5
Duncan 00, 04, 05 37 8.4 6.5 7.5
King 84-85 33 1.8 11.2 6.5
McHale 86, 88, 91 45 7.8 4.3 6.0
Bird 91-92 44 6.3 5.8 6.0
Rodman 93, 95-97 100 7.8 3.5 5.6
Pippen 94, 98 48 7.6 3.3 5.4
Penny 97, 00 55 3.8 6.9 5.3
Garnett 06-11 72 5.7 4.9 5.3
Shaq 96-98, 00-04 142 6.4 4.1 5.3
West 67-69, 71 76 4.7 5.8 5.3
Hakeem 86, 91-92, 95-96 72 3.5 6.3 4.9
Kareem 75, 78 37 3.1 6.7 4.9
Mourning 94, 96-98 74 4.1 5.2 4.7
McGrady 02-04 28 -0.6 9.9 4.7
KJ 90, 93-97 129 4.7 3.7 4.2
Erving 73, 78, 83 29 4.1 4.2 4.1
Kidd 00, 04-05 46 2.9 4.9 3.9
Kobe 00, 04-07, 10 79 3.9 3.5 3.7
Barkley 87, 91, 94-97 100 3.5 3.5 3.5
Odom 05, 07 44 0.3 5.7 3.0
Cowens 75, 77 47 2.8 3.1 3.0
Pierce 07, 10 46 0.1 5.3 2.7
Ewing 87, 94-96 31 -1.1 6.4 2.6
Baylor 61-62, 66 54 2.3 2.4 2.4
Drexler 90, 93, 94, 96 90 2.4 1.0 1.7
Moses 78, 84 36 -1.1 4.2 1.6
Iverson 00-02, 04, 06 89 0.5 2.7 1.6
Webber 95, 97-98, 01-03 104 2.5 0.7 1.6
Wilkins 92-93 51 -0.3 3.1 1.4
Allen 02, 04, 07 66 -0.7 2.6 0.9
Hill 95, 00, 05 35 -2.5 4.2 0.9
Wade 04-08 95 -1.5 3.2 0.8
Wilt 65, 65, 70 156 -0.3 0.8 0.3
Paul 07, 10 55 -1.6 1.2 -0.2
Yup. This is my issue when people say things like "well he lost to Russell and Russell is already in". Russell doesn't deserve to be in first because he won - even casual fans know this is a team sport - he deserves it because he clearly outplayed Wilt when you look at helping his team win.
Is it clear though. Sportwriter accolades went clearly to Wilt at the time. You've got George Kiseda saying 1 in 3 nights, Wilt won, one in three Russell won, and one in three Wilt dominated. Russell has great with/without numbers so long as you're willing to ignore '57 (the largest sample, and one in which the team hadn't built a style around Russell). And you've got the above which seems to suggest Wilt didn't have great impact, except as Colts notes they got significantly worse when he left, and as we will discuss later, Wilt was seriously ill at the time.
Doctor MJ wrote:And you know who else did? Look at that list.
See above.
Doctor MJ wrote:I realize that things have progressed since then but basketball had been around over half a century at the time and everyone instantly recognized the physical talent of Wilt. That he wasn't able to do more was a shock to them because as people here suggest, it seems like it should be simple. What Wilt instead proved to be was a bed sheet too small for the bed. You pull one corner to solve one problem and next thing you know it's something else.
Hard to argue with a metaphor. I suppose I'd say you need someone not incompetent at bedmaking in charge, not trying to put him on sidewise. I'd also note his obvious initial impact.
Doctor MJ wrote:I think in general people have far too much faith in their own superior ability to handle Wilt...and I actually think that makes them a lot like the more problematic people of that time.
I don't think I'd be a good coach for Wilt. I think a decent or better NBA coach (i.e. not a good ex-pro who the owner likes, or whatever, with little or no experience; or an unflexible combatative coach who rigidly abides by one system), would be a good coach for Wilt. And they were.
Doctor MJ wrote:I think if you aren't awestruck by Hannum's move you aren't seeing things how they were, and if you're not discouraged that even Hannum's struggled to maintain Wilt's focus for what today would be a fraction of the duration of a max deal I really don't know what else to say.
I think if you don't see Chamberlain's immediate impact on D or that teams were successful with Wilt as a low post scorer (see '62) in spite of poor floor spacing, or that Hannum had Wilt in plenty enough focused for the '68 Sixers to be clearly the NBA's best team who got crippled by injuries in the playoffs. Or if reffering to '65 I'd note serious injuries including the possible/suspected heart attack/pancreatitis and weight loss, the fact his team was 1-4 when he arrived. "At times the Warriors look like out-clinic patients at St. Mary's Hostpital" said the SF Chronicles Stu Herman (per The Rivalry p220). Then John Thompson broke his nose on December 4th (in his absence SF lost twice 81-105 to Boston and 93-113 to St Louis both at home). I think Wilt did slip back into scoring Wilt at this time, but partly out of necessity with other players injured and ineffective. And to be honest I do tend to care more what a guy does to a good team rather than to a lousy one. With trade rumours, the team not fully healthy and lousy without him (1-6, with 680 points scored, 748 conceded, a net loss of 68 points, or -9.714285714 per game) ill-health and a broken nose, I think Wilt didn't help as much as he might have. He's probably a poor guy (of these all-time elites) to have in this situation. I don't think anybody really helps make your team relevent here though.