It is a great accomplishment -- however, as I pointed out before, I hate to just use 50 wins per season for any length of time as the only criteria for judging a top player (past or present) in this league. TD is going to go down as one of the best players to ever play in this league -- he has been incredibly consistent on both ends of the court and without him there is no way that the Spurs would have ever continued this streak. But there are other players who have been just as good, Hakeem comes to mind, who just didn't have the rest of the team to make that happen.
You are right, Randy. There was nothing special about Magic, Bird or Russell. There have been several players just as good. It was just the fact that they (Russell/Bird/Magic) had better teams around them. In fact I think I will start a crusade to stop referring to those teams as Russell's Celtics or Bird's Celtics or Magic's Lakers. It is obvious that players like Oscar Robertson would have led their team to much higher accomplishments if they had the same advantage of superior teammates.
BTW Hakeem in his 17 years with Houston led them to only 5 seasons of 50+ wins and the best streak was two years in a row. They didn't even win 50 in their second championship season.
Lurker, sometimes reasoning with you is a lost cause. Of COURSE there was something special about Magic, Bird, Russell and TD -- however, it wasn't because they lead their teams to 50+ points in each of those seasons. If this is all the criteria you use for evaluating a player, then these guys were far more special than that MJ guy (who, IMO, was the most talented player to ever play the game). These guys deserve their props for winning so consistently but it has a lot to do with the teammates they are playing with, doesn't it? After all, what about the year that TD went down with injuries?
I sure wouldn't say that I think that Bird was a more special player than Oscar Robinson. I think the Big O was one of the best players to ever play the game -- and he definately made his teammates better or he would have averaged almost 10 assists over the lifetime of his career (which is even more amazing when you see that he 26 ppg, 4 blocks, 7 1/2 rebounds, and a fg% of 48%. I think the Big O is a better player than Bird.
As I have said before, TD is going to earn his own merit by being one of the top players to have ever played the game and he has definately made his teammates better because he makes the game easier for them, more wideopen looks because he requires a double team and so much focus from opponents defense. However, you can't use that as the only criteria for elevating players to the top of the history of the NBA. It CAN be part of the criteria but if that's all you use it gives them an unfair advantage. Hakeem was one of the top centers to ever play the game and among the best players to ever play the game. Same could be said of Oscar Robinson. You can't penalize these players simply because they didn't have the team gathered with them that Magic, Bird, Rusell and TD had. ALL of these players stand out on their own and they were all very vital to reaching the 50 wins each season.
Look at Magic's team: Magic; Byron Scott or Norm Nixon and Coop; James Worthy; Mychal Thompson and AC Green; Kareem. Magic is cemented into the history books as one of the best players to play the game because he earned it. But his team MIGHT have been able to win 50 games even without him (although we saw what happened in the playoffs when they lost him).
All of these players are incredible players -- I'm not moving TD over Oscar Robinson or Hakeem just because he had better teammates and won more games consistently over the years than they did. That sounds like an award for the teams GM and managements -- not just the players.