Chanel Bomber wrote:Wilt famously didn't value winning as much as Bill Russell and most great players did, even publicly questioning America's obsession with winning at all costs before a game 7 (an interesting conversation outside of that context), which had a deflating impact on his teammates.
No player valued winning as much as Bill Russell, so it's a moot point. Wilt was extremely competitive and he always wanted to win, in mentioned situation he questioned judging players by team success which is very fair.
He didn't always do what was necessary defensively either, especially against stretch bigs like Willis Reed, presumably because he was more focused on grabbing rebounds.
No, he didn't contest Reed jumpshots because he came off very serious injury in 1970 playoffs and didn't have 50% of mobility he had in the 1960s.
By the way, do you use the same criticism for Shaq who was much more concerning in that aspect?
And it's not a coincidence Wilt had some of the worst game 7 performances by an an all-time great in NBA history.
That's literally false, Wilt numbers in games 7 are excellent:
4-5 record, 24.4 ppg, 26.7 rpg, 4.1 APG, 62.6 FG%,45.1 FT%, 57.9 TS%
Wilt was a free spirit, a prodigy and a giant, who simply didn't have the obsession for winning that most great players are fueled by.
I don't think his dedication to winning was any lesser than guys like Shaq or Hakeem. Remember that he was willing to change his style many times in his career to find success. I can't imagine Shaq accepting Lakers Wilt role at any point of his career until his body gave out.