I saw one argument for Magic over Bird which I found interesting - that Magic outplayed Bird in the playoffs.
* 1982 = His TS% fell from 55% to 47%.
* 1983 = lose early. 56% TS down to 47.8%.
* 1985 = shooting dropped from 58.5% to 53.6% TS
* 1988 - shooting dropped from 60.1% to 53.8% TS
Incredible in 1984 & 1986. Strong in 1981 but again shot worse and scored less than you would expect in the Finals and it cost him the Finals MVP.
To provide a counter argument to this.
I am surprised this bad shooting doesn't show up more in the general playoff averages for Bird vs Magic.
So I am using a 9 year sample for Bird from 1980-88 and an 11 year sample for Magic 1980-1991. Their healthy years.
Playoff AveragesBird = 24.5ppg 10.7rpg 6.4apg 1.9spg 0.9bpg 55.5% TS
Magic = 19.2ppg 11.1apg 7.1rpg 1.9spg 0.3b 59.5% TS
BPM 7.7 for Magic
7.4 for Bird
VORP = 18.1 for Magic in 186 games / 7,403 minutes. 14.6 for Bird for 146 games / 6,176 minutes. Games and playing time matter for VORP so Magic should be ahead based on extra games / minutes.
So I am going to divide that VORP by games / minutes. Bird has 0.1 per game. Magic has 0.0973. Almost identical slight advantage Bird. I'll try minutes instead. Magic has a VORP of 2.445 for every 1000 minutes. Bird has a 2.364. So very similar slight advantage Magic.
So both BPM and VORP almost identical once you account for the difference in games / minutes in VORP.
Final ThoughtsI would have expected a bigger gap in those advanced stats but it wasn't there. Also, Larry's averages and efficiency are still very strong despite several bad shooting performances in the playoffs.
Larry's TS% for this period was 57% which dropped to 55.5% in the playoffs. Magic's TS% for his period was 60.9% and dropped to 59.5% in the playoffs. Both dropped by about 1.5% TS. A nearly identical drop in TS%. But large advantage Magic in TS% overall.