I'd like to first answer those who assume that the top modern players of today couldn't hold a candle to those of yesteryear, after all, the statistics just speak for themselves. How many rebounds does Tim Duncan pull down, 11, 12 on a good year. Russell and Chamerlain were in the 20s, 6 foot 5 Elgin Baylor pulled down 18 boards in a season. All this seems like a no-brainer, you have to look beyond simple statistics.
The game and the 60s was fast, more field goals were attempted, therefore more field goals were missed, hence more rebounds to be had. Russell's 1st full year, 1957-58 season (rookie year, he played 48 games due to commitment to USA basketball), he averaged 22.7 rpg. That year, your average NBA team attempted 89 shots per game and made roughly 34. That's 55 rebounds per game to be pulled down, that means he took down ~41% of the rebounds that were available per game. Let's compare that with last year's leading rebounder--Kevin Garnett at 12.8 rpg. Average Team made 37 of 80, 43 rebounds available, of which Garnett took ~30%. If Garnett were in the 57-58 NBA season, his season rebound average would have been 16.6 rpg -- good for 4th in the NBA behind Russell's 22.7, Maurice Stokes' 18.1, and Bob Pettit's 17.4; and ahead of Dolph Shayes' 14.2 and Red Kerr's 13.4. So Garnett's still pretty much their with HOFers Shayes and Pettit but still well short of Russell (nothing to be ashamed of BTW).
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The question of defense is tricky. From my statistical analysis above, you'd see the average team in 1957-58 shot at about 38%. As an aside, Russell's offense is widely disparaged, yet his 44.2% that year was good for 3rd highest in the NBA. Last year, the average team shot 46%. Clearly one can say that defense is much weaker in the modern game. You have to take into account rule changes, game pace, coaching philosophy, etc. Its much harder on perimeters players with hand-checking rules hence its easier to penetrate, break the defense, and raise scoring. Players are more specialized now, with designated shooters on the floor (Jason Kapono, Michael Redd, Ray Allen, Mike Miller) and designated defenders that rarely attempt shots (Desagana Diop, Quinton Ross, Bruce Bowen, and Shane Battier). Hence the correct players are more often than not shooting the ball, raising scoring percentage. The philosophy changed from getting as many possessions as possible to put up the maximum amount of shot attempts where coaches rarely dictated individual plays to now where coaches slow the game down to maximize each possession often-times dictating which play is to be ran each time down the court. All these factors lead to higher offensive percentages without necessarily meaning that defenders today don't measure up to those of yesterday.
. . . now back to the continuing saga with WayOutWest
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I agree Ted but it's my opinion that guys like Kareem and Wilt would be just as effective in todays game as they were in thier day and IMO Russel and Mikam would not. That's why I would pick Kareem over Russel for my "all time" team because I want players that would be just as effective today or in the 40's. It's alot easier for a player to be successfull in past eras that is playing today then for players from the past to play today. There are exceptions all across the board of course. I don't think I was completely clear in my arguement about Russell, I have no doubt he would be successful in todays game, he'd probably be an all-star but no way am I passing up on Kareem or Wilt to take Russel for MY team. Kareem was unstoppable, Wilt was pretty close as well but not quite up to Kareems level because of his FT's. Russell was far from unstoppable on offense and he would fair no better against Kareem or Wilt on defense than anybody else and that would pretty much dilute from his overall effectiveness on the court because his biggest contribution on the court was defense.
I'll give you the fact that you've framed your argument a little better with this paragraph. On
your personal all-time team, you feel the skills of Wilt and Kareem translate across the entire spectrum much better than Russell or Mikan. I'm sure it has nothing to do with the fact they were both Lakers, hmmmm? 8)Sorry, the congruence was too easy. In short I agree with you on Mikan, but not Russell.
Mikan was truly a giant amongst the men of his era. Basketball was a fringe sport on the national scene -- locally supported teams and schools playing in armories and barns captured the attention of your average fan moreso than the professional team out of Fort Wayne or Minneapolis (Mikan's team). In this different era of exposure, the best players weren't always in the professional league of basketball (BAA and later NBA). It was easier for 6'10, 250 pound guy like Mikan to absolutely dominate before the shot-clock era, and when each possession started with a jump ball. At the age of 32 (his last season), he'd regressed greatly, mustering only 37 games of the 82 game season and averaging 10 points and 8 rebounds.
Russell's era, while still nowhere near the spectacle it is today, was more refined and more advanced than that of Mikan's. Russell's rookie year was the year after Mikan retired, people lump Mikan and Russell together never realizing they never played in the league together. Russell's league truly had the best players in the country populating the teams and the competition was legitimately the best. That was made no more true than when Wilt Chamberlain (the finest athlete of his generation) left the Globetrotters to play in the NBA. Chamberlain is the feather in Russell's cap, what separates him from basketball giants (Jack Twyman, Maurice Stokes, Jerry Lucas, Bob Pettit, Dolph Shayes, and Elgin Baylor). None of those players consistently beat Chamberlain save one.
Forget about Russell for a second and just think of Chamerlain's legacy: Physical paragon of athleticism, arguably most dominant offensive player, most dominant rebounder, only player to score 100 in a game, immovable, unstoppable. Yet, when it came to winning one man stood in his way year after year. I might have more doubt in my mind about the greatness of Russell had Chamberlain came after Russell, but they played 85% of their careers during the same era, yet one guy has 11 championships and one guy has 2 championships. Championships are the measure of greatness of in my mind because that is when pressure, anxiety, and competition are at its highest. Championship series are the clutch situations of the season at large. The Finals is to the season what the last 2 minutes of a tie is to a hard-fought 48 minute game. It's do or die, there is no tomorrow, no next time, nothing but failure or success. The great ones rise to the occasion, welcome the challenge, relish the pressure, and consistently succeed -- no matter how badly the other guy wants to beat them. Its an intangible of Russell's character that I think carries through the spectrum of time. George Karl, reminiscing about his Finals against Jordan, wrote, "You have to reach in and rip Jordan's beating heart from his chest to kill him." I think much the same applies to Russell. What he and Jordan had in spades, players like Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem Abdul Jabbar lacked.
Kareem Abdul Jabbar was a dominant basketball player. One of the best two-way players in NBA history and his sky-hook was the most indefensible shot in the history of the game, yet he needed Magic Johnson (a great one among greats) on 4 of his 6 championships. Why? The answer is simple . . . Desire. By all rights and because of his unparalleled skills, Kareem should have had 10 championships, but for the most part he was content. It was why his resolve was so widely criticized during his playing days (heck the comedy "Airplane" spoofed it). The Russell/Jabbar argument would be akin to a scout (circa the summer of 1996) debating whether to recommend drafting Ben Wallace or Lorenzen Wright. One guy averaged 17 and 10 at the University of Memphis (drafted 1st round, 7th pick) and one guy played with some intensity in little Virginia Union (undrafted). While Russell isn't anywhere near the complete player Kareem was, but it takes more than skill, versatility, and athleticism to be the greatest player of ALL time, it takes heart and an absolute refusal to fail at the highest level. Something Russell and Wallace had on their respective counterparts.
So you can take Kareem or Wilt before Russell on your all-time team with Magic, Jordan, Bird, and Duncan. I'll take Russell and have the convenience of having his absolute refusal to allow his Magic, his Jordan, his Bird, and his Duncan to fail.
That went longer than expected . . .