deezna10 wrote:
How many HOF teammates did he play along side also to get those 11 rings? How many teams did he have to compete against?
On the HOF topic, you have to understand issues of causality. How many of those HOFers are HOFers *because* they played on those Celtic teams and won titles in the first place. A classic example is K.C. Jones, who was inducted as a player in 1989. His career averages ? 7 points, 4 assists a game on 39 percent shooting.
What points even more in that direction is the relatively middling status of the Celtics (they won roughly 52 percent of their games the previous two seasons) prior to Russell's arrival, which had many of the same players that would be later counted in these HOFer totals, not to mention them going off the deep end when Russell left (again, with some of the same HOFers Russell played with).
I think it's relatively obvious who the driving force and causal agent was behind them winning so much. His teammates and opponents (who voted him MVP 5 times) seemed to have the same perception.
Edit: I forgot about the 8 teams thing. That *is* a more valid point, and one I would pursue if I were on the "Jordan side". However, it should be understood that while it does mean there were fewer teams to get through, the expansion factor means less at the upper ends of the scale, where the great teams were. In other words, Russell didn't have to really go through the equivalent of poor to average teams at the same pace, but he still had to go through extremely tough teams at the end to win titles, just like anyone else.
Taking a break from the board. Please reference my last post for more details if you are interested.