70sFan wrote:DCasey91 wrote:You have to read my posts they had extra 20 ppg scorers.
What extra 20 ppg scorers Russell had in 1966? Sam Jones was legit, but Havlicek in 1966 was way before his peak, wasn't a 20 ppg scorer in RS and shot absolutely horribly against the Sixers. I don't see any reason to believe that Jones/Havlicek duo was much better than Greer/Walker duo in 1966.
Wilt put up 46/33 in game 5 1966 ffs
It's true, but thoughout th first 4 games he averaged 23.5 ppg on 49.5 TS%. He really underperformed in the series, like the whole Sixers team did.
They had by far and away the best team if you account for the 12 years!
They had by far the best team in 1957-62 period. In 1963 Lakers started to catch them up, then in 1964 they weren't clearly more talented than Royals or Lakers. In 1966 Philly started to catch them up. In 1967-68 period, Sixers were clearly more talented. In 1969, Knicks had the most talented team in the league, Lakers were also quite strong.
quote]The analysis has already been done between Wilts teammates and Russell’s throughout the duration and it’s not close
The analysis has already been done through their heads up matches it’s it not close either.
Comparing raw boxscore numbers is not an analysis.
Out of the top ten Wilt faced the best defenses and not only passed he destroyed. What is going on lol
It's true, but it doesn't mean that Russell wasn't close to him.
If Wilt put up 9.3 points on 31.6% FG in the Finals and still win the championship 4-0 as a 24 year old wouldn’t that dampen his GOAT case? That would be impossible though because then the team he was on would lose. Wouldn’t that bring into question how conquering the overall team was?
You are talking about the sweep by the average of 11 ppg, why should we care about Russell numbers in this series? In much closer ECF series against the Nationals, Russell averaged 19.1 ppg on 52 TS%.
Wilt won the ring in the finals when he averaged 17.7 ppg on 49.7 TS% and nobody questions his greatness - and rightfully so.
Never understood the Bill vs Wilt argument it’s as clear as day who was better.
It wasn't "as clear as a day" for the people who watched him play and it's not clear for the analytics who are interested in history. It's only clear for those who compare boxscore stats...[/quote]
In 69 you can throw the Bullets in there for talent, and agree pretty much in assessment of talent; Celtics had the edge thru probably 63, but 64-68 was pretty darn close, and 69 they werent close.
I would take exception to the Sixers being clearly more talented - Billy C was young, so the Sixers were starting Jones, Jackson, Walker and Greer.
Greer and Sam Jones are basically even, with Sam a much better post season player.
Havlicek is definitely better than Walker,
Bailey Howell still better than Jackson.
KC Jones vs Wally Jones isnt really going to make a difference.
So really hard to go with the Sixers being clearly more talented, especially in 67.
68 Celtics are getting old, but same cast of characters that just won 60 games.
But 63-69 the Celtics weren't head and shoulders above everybody.