OMG!!
You're way ahead on this argument, don't stoop to Skandery's level!
WOW, you're getting a vote of endorsement from Rickortreat, the resident, self-contradicting, nonsense spewing, homer fanatic on the board. I'll go ahead and accept the concession of your defeat.
I've already answered all your questions, including the Yes/No.
Is a 20 pound difference that profound...YES or NO. You're going to have to point out where you've answered that--I don't have my beer goggles on me.
What about the pyramids, why are you avoiding that one?
Let's try to stay on topic, shall we. We'll talk about pyramids, unicorns, and pretty rainbows after we've finished, will that be ok....good boy.
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And now we've come to our regularly scheduled daily "
Rickortreat Condradicts Himself" moment. YAY.
Rick astutely points out.
Today there are no dominant Centers in the NBA, which is why Wallace can play the postion.
. . . and goes on to make this well-expositioned assumption about 60s basketball . . .
Anyone who saw Wilt and Russel play can see the difference. The athleticism was less, but the basketball intelligence and sophistication of the players was much higher. Watching teams in the 60's involved more strategy and technique and quality play than any time since. The talent level was so much higher with so few teams, who saw each other so often, that the edge went to teams with better coaching.
So when I argue that Russell COULD, in fact, play in today's NBA and dominate due to the lack of real Centers and his own intelligence, sophistication, understanding of strategy and technique (all that sound familiar Rick?), let alone his sheer will to win and unmatched competitive intensity (not seen until Michael Jordan came on the scene), while WOW stubbornly contends Russell has no shot against the monstrous modern Centers like Shaq, Kwame Brown, Chris Kaman, and Ilgauskas, Rick asserts . . .
WOW,
You're way ahead on this argument
He's never made sense a day in his life, ladies and gentlmen, but he's our loveable mascot anyway.
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KC Jones in the Hof and Chet "the Jet" Walker not? What a travesty!
Agreed, that's the difference between playing on a team with Russell and playing on a team with Mr. Stilt.
Bad numbers, losing games is for the "Greatest Team Of All Time" discussion.
You're not making any sense here, WOW. Most of the credit for Bad numbers for an individual when a team is playing man-to-man defense should go the main defender guarding that guy. If Jordan averages 32 ppg and a guy like Dan Majerle holds him to 23 points--you can't say Jorday destroyed him, man, he dropped 23 points on his head, you say Majerle held his own. Same thing, when Wilt would average 40 and 50 ppg in a season but would routinely put up 20 and 25 points against Russell you can't say Wilt still got his numbers or that Russell was destroyed because Will put up 25 against him. Russell did just enough to hold Wilt down for his team to win the game almost every time they stepped on the court, plain and simple.
IMO, the Sixers had more talent in several years where the Celts won and then took the championship. Boston, had the better team and the better system, more experience in pressure situations and better poise. No one stopped anyone, but one team did a better job of protecting the ball or keeping their heads in a tight situation
Rick, you can give all the excuses you want for your Sixers failures: experience, poise, system, coach, whatever, you and WOW can't run away from this one inescapable truth. When William Fenton Russell met Wilton Norman Chamberlain on the grandest stage, he got the better of him 9 out of 10 times. And if he could bring down Wilt time and again, I hardly think he'd struggle against the likes of Moses, Shaq, Kareem, D-Rob, TD, Ewing, or any other modern day, MONSTROUS Center WOW wants to trot out.
I rest my case.