Chicago76 wrote:penbeast0 wrote:His teammates just weren't that great; they got their rep from playing with Russell though the Celtics tended to be very deep and they weren't dogs; but wihtout Russell and the rings, only Havlicek and maybe Cousy (As the first true PG) would be in the HOF. It's the 11 titles that got relatively unimpressive players like KC Jones and Frank Ramsey into the HOF.
That's kind of underselling Russell's teammates, don't you think? I mean, if his teammates weren't that great, then who has had great teammates in the history of the game?
Like you said, Cousy and Havlicek are HOFers no matter what, but what about Bill Sharman? If Russell never showed up, he would have been in the Hall regardless. What about Sam Jones? His numbers don't look great in his first couple of years, but keep in mind that Sharman and Cousy had the backcourt spots locked down, so there weren't a lot of minutes to go around. His production after his first three years was excellent. Jones would have been a HOFer on another team where he didn't need to share minutes early on. Have him switch places with Hal Greer and both are still in the Hall. Heinsohn...probably not, but that's not a shabby piece to have in the lineup with all of those other guys. Howell was another probably not without the benefit of same late years with Boston, but again, not a bad piece. KC and Ramsey definitely not.
If Russell wasn't a Celtic, then a solid center most likely would have fallen into place for them through the draft at some point to give them a couple of championships given the players already in place and the number of teams in the league at the time...Reed, Thurmond, Kerr, Bellamy, Beaty, someone.
They had a HOF center for the 4 years before they traded him as part of the deal to get Russell's draft rights. And, playing Cousy, Sharman, and HOF center Ed McCauley (a pretty good offensive player -- keep in mind that pretty much any one who ever made an All-Star team before 1960 is in the HOF) they were a non-contender, never making a serious playoff run and finishing 2nd, 3nrd, 3rd, and 2nd in a 4 team division for the four years before Russell . . . then they finished 1st for 11 of the next 13 years despite pretty much complete personnel turnover before diving into the cellar (despite still having John Havlicek in his prime) when Russell left. It wasn't his teammates.