The KG vs Duncan thread got me thinking about the difference between a contending team and a championship team.
To get straight to the point this is about building a championship winning team - not just a contender, not just a consistent 45-55 win team. The goal is to win championships, and with 30 teams it is a long shot to do this.
The formulas are extremely simple and sobering. You have to have the best players. Not coaches, mind you.... players.
1. All-Decade Center
This is ideal. Since the beginning of the NBA, the team with the best (or second best center of their decade), won the NBA title at least 35 times.
Mikan, Russel, Chamberlain, Jabbar, (Reed, Cowens, Unseld, Walton - take your pick for 1 or 2 titles each), Moses Malone, Olajuwon, Shaq and Duncan. Thats 35+ NBA titles.
2. All NBA 1st teamer surrounded with other All NBA or All defense talent:
Jordan, Bird, Rick Barry, Bob Petit, Kobe Bryant etc. These types of superstars mixed with the super Center teams account for every NBA championship in NBA history except for 4.
I'm going to take 2 more away because although Isaiah Thomas was not a first teamer at the time of his teams' 2 titles, he was still an all NBA talent, and not to far removed from 3 all NBA 1st team selections.
That leaves 2 teams.
3. Get lucky with a talented collection of star players - this accounts for only the 2 remaining teams. Two teams across over more than half a century.
1979 Seattle Sonics - defensive team led by Dennis Johnson, Jack Sickma and Gus Williams
2004 Detroit Pistons - defensive team led by Ben Wallace, Chauncey Billups and Rasheed Wallace
These 2 teams played great defense, and were in the right place at the right time. No one will ever confuse them with being one of the best teams of all time. Nonetheless, they were excellent and managed to grab the title for a year.
...so, In order to increase your chances, you've got to go get an all-decade great big man or a perennial All NBA 1st team player, and surround them with excellent talent.
How do I get them? Rarely can you trade for one of these types of players. And if you do, there has to be some irreparable frustrating damage left in their wake. For example: Shaq, Garnett (the only 2 recent names to lead or co-lead to a title after a trade), Nash, Barkley, Webber, Iverson, Kidd, T-Mac, Mourning and so on.
Usually once a superstar is drafted (or picked up on a draft trade), they do not change teams (at least while in their prime). For example: Bird, Magic, Olajuwon, Ewing, Thomas, Jordan, K Malone, Stockton, Pippen, Robinson, Payton, Shaq, Duncan, Kobe, Nowitzki, James, Wade, Howard, Garnett (KG was only traded just after his prime).
That means the most common way to start the foundation of a title team is to get lucky in the draft.
Whats the point of all this Mr October? Well, when it is time to dismantle this Celtics team, I want to strip it down to only desirable assets (Rondo, Perkins), and swing for the fences in free agency or in the draft.
I don't want to see the Celtics try to get the next Kevin Martin, Andre Iguodala or Ben Gordon (and there has been a lot of talk about trying to get borderline stars swapped in for our borderline stars). I want to see the Celtics try to get the next great big man. I certainly don't want to see a mediocre decade of 35-45 wins.
All or nothing.
Right now the Celtics are too darn close to getting it all. Lets go get this thing!!!
And then in a year or 2, when it is time to strip the team down, the team needs to swing for the fences. Get a Superstar or keep trying. Never settle for mediocrity.
I'd like to hear your thoughts on this post, on how to build an NBA champion, and especially one in Boston.