Bird is arguably the best SF ever. And most would point to his team's success as the difference...there have been other small forwards with as good of stats. Why would most fans pick Bird over Erving as the best SF of all time? Because when you start looking at the best of alltime then team success becomes a very big factor. Unless it involves the Spurs then Randy's blinders jump up faster than Reality can start a Kobe thread.
I'm jumping in only because it seems we've all come down a little hard on Randy, lately, and if I'm not completely misunderstanding his point, I can sort of agree with where he is coming from . . . with various disclaimers and dependent factors.
Assuming that the main thesis of his point is the following, "
An uber-elite, historically transcendent player is an uber-elite, historically transcendent player no matter how many times his team clears 50 wins and no matter how many rings he is wearing."
In one part I agree with that statment. One of the most memorable basketball players of all time is Pistol Pete Maravich but he sure didn't do a whole lot of winning in the NBA. Randy makes no bones about the fact that TD should be mentioned alongside the absolute cream of the crop when it comes to all time greats because he has surpassed a certain threshold of individual ability and accomplishments. Should Oscar Robertson not be mentioned alongside the greatest players because he didn't have the team talent to win a-lot of rings and is that truly fair? Same would go for Wilt, Jerry West, Rick Barry, Dr. J., Hakeem Olajuwon, etc. who have 1 or 2 rings? Even a tougher question for guys like Barkley, Ewing, Miller, who have no rings.
On the other hand, one can't lose sight of the fact that Basketball is a TEAM sport, and the conventional method of measuring TEAM success is WINS and CHAMPIONSHIPS. Not only must your individual ability be tremendous or transcendent, you must also elevate the play of your teammates, and in a perfect world assert your will so that the outcome of "Losing" is simply
not an option!
In that dogmatically narrow criteria, I would venture only a few players can truly be placed on the pedestal of elite status; specifically, Bill Russell, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Shaquille O'Neal, and Tim Duncan. Each of those players played with a passion for winning and an absolute hatred for losing that they simply overcame the odds to continuously win year after year. You can further split hairs and micro-analyze the contribution of each of those players teammates (Cousy/Havlicek, McHale/Parish, Kareem/Worthy, Pippen, Kobe, and Robinson/Manu). In the end a very few select, 1 or 2 in a generation type players, through sheer force of will push their teams to consistently win, season after season, playoff after playoff.
That slight, but supremely significant difference between someone like Tim Duncan and Hakeem Olajuwon has to be acknowledged.