sansterre wrote:Bump for Team #44, the 1965 Boston Celtics!
Excellent write up as per usual. For those not really familiar towards statistical measurement numbers such as standard deviation, the stem-leaf plot puts into perspective how much of a gap there was between the Celtics and everyone else and how the other teams for the most part were bunched together. When I see that the StdDev is 2+, I’m impressed, but for many others, the Stem-Leaf might put it into better perspective.
It’s interesting to note how many of those great Russell Celtic teams played 7 game series, often with the home team winning every game (i.e., the Celtics and Russell not winning a single game on the road but never losing at home).
1959 vs. Syracuse, 4-3, no road games won, Celtics won game 7 at home by 5 points
1960 vs. St. Louis, 4-3, each team won one road game
1962 vs. Philadelphia, 4-3, no road games won
1962 vs. Los Angeles, 4-3, 4 road games won, Celtics won game 7 at home by 3 points
1963 vs. Cincinnati, 4-3, 4 road games won
1965 vs. Philadelphia, 4-3, no road games won, won game 7 by 1
1966 vs. Los Angeles, 4-3, 4 road games won, won game 7 by 2
1968 vs. Philadelphia, 4-3, 5 road games won, won game 7 by 4 on the road
1969 vs. Los Angeles, 4-3, 1 road game won, won game 7 by 2 on the road
In any case, these close series seem like what would be the case for a bunched league though one would think the Celtics would win “easier” given how much better they were than the competition in some of these years, like 1965.