Aw hell, I've got to unleash as I was the 8 year old who knew every stat of the 10 lb NBA Encyclopedia and only got worse when I added NCAA mania to it in 1976. Later, I was the 14 year old in Boston Garden, when my beloved Sixers, were cheered on at the end of Game 7 of the Eastern finals, by the rival, usually hostile Celtics crowd in defeat, "Beat LA, Beat LA"...spine chilling...
This feels like your talking about my life...
1. This conversation started talking about the 3-pt shot and I remember Chris Ford making that first one; but I think an honest examination of all the many such "rules" regimes imposed on basketball and all the major sports reveals that they are usually an exploitation idea, to make the game sell more; they are almost never about the well-being or purity of the sport. The 3 point shot was first a brainchild of the Globetrotter's Abe Saperstein to have a unique fan-attraction novelty for his shortlived ABL, the ABA cam next and kept it and held a rebel's approach to basketball (think USFL legitimacy with XFL gimmick) for 10 years. When adopted, four years after the merger, the NBA had no idea that Bird and Magic were going to revitalize interest in the league's traditional big markets, and needed something, as if those around, will remember, the late 70s saw the NBA in decline with drug-charges, team shenanigans, and the major markets of LA, Chicago Boston and NY all with teams in the crapper. One other note on the 3 pt...as an offensive tactic (heavy use) I think some original development credit has to go to that Pitino era of the Knicks (86 - 88) whose teams was marketed as the Bomb Squad and at the same time Don Nelsons "Run-TMC" with Tim Hardaway (Sr.), Chris Mullin and Mitch Richmond...they were offensive producers and shocked the hell out of everybody that such an approach would come from the conservative Nelson, whose coaching name was made with the Mq. Johnson Bucks who had a completely different O. To me, those two things in the late 80s were DNA in the seed corn for the deep shooting game we have today.
2. Bird and Magic are like the BC/AD historical division of the NBA; their novel skills, their immediate success and the carryover from college interest were like the ending of the Old Testament and the beginning of the New. Magic, a big guy with a near Curly Neal handle, was as new as if Aaron Judge and Mike Trout were to emerge in the body of a single rookie this year. It was that revolutionary. Bird was like if Greg Maddux also had Randy Johnson's stuff, who ever wants to face him? Bird turned around the fallen Celtics from 29-53 to 61-21, but didn't yet have McHale and DJ in support, losing to my Dr J. Sixers... Magic led the Lakers to their first title in a almost a decade, winning the clinching Game 6 playing center for the inured Jabbar, going 42-15 and 7. (*** that was the last NBA Finals game broadcast on tape-delay, starting at 11:30 pm ET local***)
3. Russell needs to be in that spot between Mikan and Chamberlain as the Abraham, Issac and David of the Center evolution, with perhaps Alcindor-Jabbar as the last of the Old Testament prophets. Russell made the athleticism of big man defense a thing to be engaged, in the way Lawrence Taylor changed the NFL forever from a defensive position, in a way that Jim Brown, Walter Payton, Joe Montana, Jerry Rice and Tom Brady haven't from an offensive pedestal. Walton, if healthy, could have predictably made an similar impact, but rally, the next evolution is Ewing-Olajuwon (shooters, scorers, with defensive skills).
4. I think if there's was a palpable decline in the quality of game play, it occurred when Chuck Daly's Pistons came into McNasty and McFilthy (Mahorn and Ruland) pre-deranged, (but deranged) Rodman, the physical play of Vinnie Johnson; that Pistons squad took the "showtime Lakers" and the fast break Celtics and brought it into the mire...
5. Which leads to my thoughts on the legacy of Jordan who has no betters in talent and skill and court judgment, but who only prospered as a ring champion when that Lakers/Sixers/Celtics/ era of the 80s passed, and the game had been brutalized down by Daly and Riley's Knicks... Jordan did not win his first championship for 7 seasons and wasn't even in the Conf finals for 5/6 (?) of those years... and held the dubious mark of something like 0 -15 in 40 pt games of his, until that era had passed and he had the quality around him...and the big man was back on the run. But on the playground of the NBA pantheon, he still is my first pick...I like to say it this way...I'd take Chamberlain in the first quarter, Lebron in the 2nd, Magic in the 3rd and Jordan in the 4th...no OT in that universe, but Reggie Miller comes to mind.
6. The one and done/straight to NBA from HS thing was really inaugurated by Bill Willoughby of the Rockets in the NBA and Moses Malone of the ABA...the famous story of Malone was that Lefty Driesell had the amazing Petersburg Va, bull wrapped up for Maryland as that Lucas, MacMillan era was winding down and the Utah Stars of the ABA came to Malone's impoverished shack and laid down 100, $100 dollar bills on his mother's kitchen table....the rest is history.
7. The Wilt 61-62 season is like the unicorn season of all time, like a Jim Brown (pick) or a Brady-Moss 07...
I could, like many things, talk forever on this, but enough for now - great OT discussion.