Doctor MJ wrote:I wanted to put these two points back together. First, let's look at Walton's teammates in '76-77 in terms of the type of player they were in their career from a bkref page.
These are the 5 other guys who played major minutes for the Blazers in the playoffs that year, order by who played most.
Next to their name I'm going to put details about their career:
1. Mo Lucas, 5-time all-star, legit defensive stud and tough guy, but also a generally inefficient lead scorer and shot taker who really shouldn't have been in that role on any NBA team.
2. Lionel Hollins, 1-time all-star, 2-time All-D, the next year again with Walton in Portland. Is the next main scorer after Lucas & Walton and is considerably less efficient than Lucas. Also basically shouldn't be used with the primacy he was used.
3. Bob Gross, non all-star but All-D in '77-78, only scored above 10 points twice - this year, and the next.
4. Johnny Davis, non all-star journeyman
5. Dave Twardzik, an all-star once in the ABA, but from here on out a guy playing mid-20s MPG.
That's the core. Now look, I'm not going to say that was a weak defensive supporting cast, though Walton's work is unimpeachable on that front, but offensively, remember that in '76-77 this was the #2 ORtg offense in the league out of 22 teams.
Does that look like a "stacked" offensive lineup around Walton to you?
It definitely doesn't look like a stacked offensive lineup, but teams like that are usually underrated at first glance. Lionel Hollins was legit good offensive player, Twardzik could play in his role as well as anyone, Lucas was excellent passer which you didn't mention and Portland also had very strong bench.
You dismiss my point about '78-79 by saying the Lakers were "poorly structured". Let's keep what we're talking about straight.
I'm saying that Walton's teammates weren't that talented, and your rebuttal for '78-79 was not to deny this but to blame "structure" for the difference in success. And what is structure? How the team plays. Well, yeah. That's the whole thing.
The structure isn't how team plays. It's how each player fit with another and Lakers team had terribly built roster - Wilkes and Dantley played in the starting lineup, so they didn't have PF. Nixon liked to shoot too much and the rest of the roster was simply weak. None of these players fit well with Kareem and they wouldn't fit well with Walton either.
The Blazers played differently than everyone else and this allowed Bill Walton to win a championship and lead a dominant team without a ton of help around him.
Because we're talking about an apples-to-oranges comparison it isn't straight forward how to say which player between Kareem and Walton deserves more credit. I prefer to say that Walton couldn't do what Kareem did and Kareem couldn't do what Walton did and thus it's really up to what you value more.
But it is also true that Walton's offenses literally seemed to be doing more with less than Kareem's while he was also flat out out playing Kareem on defense.
The problem is that Walton didn't have less than Kareem though - by Ben Taylor estimations, Blazers played at ~9th offense pace without Walton - the truth is that Ramsey built excellent system that Walton made better, but he wasn't necessary to make it work. Blazers look weak without Walton because of his defense, not his offense.
In short - you look at Blazers offense through "Walton made it work" lenses, but there is no reason to believe that. They did quite well without him in RS, they did well against the Supersonics in 1978 playoffs offensively and even in 1979 when the team already changed a lot, they were above average offensively.
Walton's famous impact on Portland is related to his defense, not offense.
It is also visible in 1976 before Portland got Ramsey - they were still very good defensively, but their offense sucked and Walton couldn't change that alone.
Eh, I would say the data seems to indicate to me that the '77 Blazer offense stood out more than the '70 Bucks offense, you're right it wasn't a big gap though.
Blazers were +3.8 offense in 1977 and 1978 in games Walton played in RS. Bucks were +3.1 which is worse of course, but then we should also talk more about playoffs offense which I will touch later.
First, as I've said, I don't think Walton could be a better Kareem than Kareem.
Just to be clear - I don't think Kareem could be better Walton either, they are much different players

Second, given that Walton was a better playmakers than Kareem or anyone else on either team, wouldn't that make it easier for his guards?
Not in 1977 case, seriously these guards were worse than anything I've seen in NBA playoffs history...
I'm curious how many playmakers you see on the '76-77 Blazers roster that were in the same ballpark as rookie Magic and old Oscar as playmakers.
None, but again - in games I've seen Oscar wasn't Oscar anymore in 1974. I don't want to completely reject his impact, but he wasn't good in playoffs.
I'd ask you why this specific thing matters to you though.
We're in clear disagreement of how good this Blazers team was offensively, that's why I think your arguments doesn't do Jabbar justice.
Re: "could overstate his abilities though". Please be specific. What is it you think I'm overstating?
Let me also make clear before you answer: I see the offense Ramsey ran as a reinvention of a pre-Mikan offense. A throwback to how teams used to play. I'm not trying to credit Walton with inventing the scheme, but the fact that Walton would be less effective in another scheme doesn't matter to me from an MVP perspective given that I don't see any reason to think that that scheme represented some unfair advantage. Ramsey built that scheme around Walton. It was the way to build around Walton. Other guys have schemes built around them too.
You can certainly argue that Kareem would do better with a better plan around him, and I'm not saying you're necessarily wrong, but it's no minor thing to build a Top 2 offense around any player who doesn't dictate the possession of the offense from the start.
Ramsey built offense around off-ball movement and fast pace, an offense that did very well without Walton. That's my point - I think you give Walton a bit too much credit for the Blazers results. I don't want to sound harsh on him, because he was the best offensive player on that team overall but the fact that Blazers didn't do badly at all without him shows that this system wasn't built around Walton, but it was built around overall roster structure. Walton's amazing passing ability certainly helped, but it wasn't the essence of this offense.
Second thing is that I think you overstate how good these Blazers teams were offensively. As I mentioned earlier, they were +3.8 with Walton in RS, which is excellent but nothing close to all-time great level. Of course Walton didn't have all-time great teammates so it's fair to be impressed, but Kareem did better than that in 3 prime seasons: 1971, 1972 and 1980 (1970 was close at +3.1 and 1974 at +3.5). I don't have the data for 1975 and 1978 team with Kareem, but I'd expect that 1978 Lakers were over +3 with him.
The bigger point is how well 1977 Blazers played in playoffs on offense and results weren't staggering - +2.1 offense is nice again, but Kareem topped that in 1970-72, 1974 and 1978-80. Even if we exclude years when Jabbar had clearly better supporting cast (and 1978 because that's only 3 games), that leaves us with 1970, 1972, 1974 and 1979. I don't think he had better supporting cast in any of these seasons and he faced ATG defenses in all of them.
So even if you want to say that Walton did more with less in RS (which is arguable), there is no proof that Walton was capable of carrying elite defense in playoffs, when Jabbar did that consistently.
I think that the whole argument for Walton here is on defensive side of the court.