picko wrote:Scottie Pippen was a truly elite player. During the championship years, including the year Jordan missed, he was a 6.0 BPM player. Sixth highest in the league during that time - and higher than both Hakeem and Shaq over that period.
I hope you're not seriously suggesting that Pippen was better than Hakeem and Shaq in the early-mid 90's.
He was an absurdly good player during that era who fit seamlessly with Jordan offensively and may have been the best perimeter defender of all-time.
Pippen was very good. He wasn't "absurdly good." That's reserved for guys like MJ, Shaq, Dream, Barkley, Lebron, or even prime DRob.
Focusing purely on the offensive end does Pippen a disservice. The Bulls weren't a dynasty because Jordan was the greatest of all-time. He was just as good, if not better, when the Bulls struggled to escape the first round.
Jordan was not anywhere near as good in 1987 or 1988 (the year they didn't get past the first round or only made it to the second round) as he was even in 1989, much less as good as he was in 1990-1993. For starters, his range improved, his off-ball play went from good to elite, his defense became more focused and disciplined while still being disruptive, and by 1990 he was among the very best midrange shooters in the league. In addition, his game management and team play improved in terms of knowing when to turn it on, how/when to get his teammates involved etc. 1991 or '92 Jordan is about 15-25% better than, say, 1988 Jordan in terms of making a difference in the W-L column on good teams.
So no, the addition of Pippen and Jackson was far from the only thing that changed between 1987-1991. And Pippen didn't even became a legit all-star level player until 1991 anyway - his 4th year in the league.
The difference between those early teams and the dominant teams was the addition of Pippen and Jackson. They were the difference between a middling 40ish wins and winning more than 60 games a season.
Incorrect. See above. Also, the Bulls made the ECF in 1989 and gave the Pistons their only two losses of the postseason with Pippen averaging 13/7/4/54% TS and being nowhere near the defender he'd become in later years.
Treating the Bulls as a one-man show, even offensively, does a disservice to the likes of Pippen. He contributed massively to their success and saying that he wasn't as good as Magic or Barkley (which is an absurdly high standard to judge a player) doesn't change that.
He did contribute massively, but I don't think he contributed any more than many secondary stars have in the championship runs of other superstars like Shaq, Kobe, Lebron, Magic, Curry, Durant, Bird etc.