So two things before I get going. One, I like John Hollinger most times. I think his "numbers will one day rise up and cast us down into dungeons made of 'words' and 'hunches'" mentality is pretty narrow minded, but he's not lacking for passion.
Two, yes. This is just another John Hollinger rant.
John Hollinger
published today an article featured in the Per Diem called "Celtics working on surprise ending".
In the article he broke down other NBA teams that finished 4th or worse in their conference (as the Celtics did) and showed their similarities to the current Celtics franchise. Out of 100 conference champions there were only six that finished the regular season 4th or better.
Out of those six franchises, one of which being the 68-69 Celtics, only two of them were 'suitable' comparisons. One, the
77-78 Bullets, the other was the
94-95 Rockets
.
First, what were the criteria to the other 4 teams not being suitable comparisons? Well the
99-99 Knicks were a lockout year that played though a terrible Eastern Conference so I suppose they really don't count. The
80-81 Rockets were allegedly part of the worst conference finals in history (I don't know, I wasn't alive yet.), so they're not a good comparison either(Hollinger doesn't say this, I inferred it).
However the other two teams that don't match up are for different reasons. The
77-78 Supersonics don't compare because as he says,
The 1977-78 Sonics, for instance, like several recent champions, muddled through the first half of the season before getting scorching-hot late in the season. That Seattle team began the season 5-17, then changed coaches, swapped out a few starters and finished 42-18. In other words, it was the exact opposite of the 2010 Celtics.
So, there he covers one of his eventual points. He covers the "don't just look at the record when examining these Celtics, look at just how BAD they were in the last half of the season."
The second team he says you cannot compare the 09-10 Celtics is the
69-70 Celtics, which is
a point of some contention. User drjman's post about this:
A team that parallels the current squad in many facets is the 1968-1969 championship squad. This was the last edition of the Bill Russell era dynasty. They finished the regular season with a 48-34 record and were limping through the regular season. This was a team that everyone in the NBA thought was vulnerable and past their prime. Maybe they were but they had experience and heart. The Celtics battled their way to the NBA finals and the stage was set for another showdown with the Lakers.
Something was different this time though. This time around the Lakers were so confident that they were going to knock the Celtics, who had tormented them so much over the years, off that they planned a huge celebration for the conclusion of Game 7. Tommy always references how L.A. had balloons strapped up in the raftersand were poised to drop them as soon as the Lakers finished off the Celtics. The great irony was that the Celtics would those balloons as a sign of disrespect. This fueled the veteran team and motivated them to defeat their rival.
What the rest of the NBA and the Lakers didn't know was that this Celtics team was like a wounded animal, backed into the corner. They knew that this was their last hurrah. Player coach Bill Russell and Sam Jones each were poised to retire at the conclusion of the NBA Finals and were considered a step slower at this point in their career. Sound familiar? Despite being an extremely long in the tooth veteran team, these Celtics came together and percevered all the way to a championship.
Here is Hollinger's reasons why not: (I like to think it is a personal rebuttal against Celticsblog)
We also can eliminate the 1968-69 Celtics, who fell to the No. 4 seed in the East almost entirely because they were phenomenally unlucky during the regular season. Boston had the league's second-best point differential and normally would have won 55 games with that scoring margin but went only 7-15 in games decided by five points or fewer.
(The 1968-69 Celtics are also the pièce de résistance in the case that, as I have pointed out for years, a team's record in close games essentially comes down to luck. Given that the Celtics were 11-time champions, I don't think "knowing how to win" was the problem that season.)
What was he trying to prove here? The thesis of the article is summed up in the final paragraph.
Nonetheless, our takeaway is the same. The Celtics' ability to suddenly dial it up for the playoffs has been remarkable, but we shouldn't start expecting this as a normal occurrence. Out-of-the-blue conference champions come along about once per decade, and out-of-the-blue title teams appear with even less frequency. It would be a mistake to glean from this one example that those will now become annual events.
So what is his message? "I couldn't have seen this coming, and it probably won't happen again anytime soon. My system works. Seriously. Seriously it works and nobody could've seen this coming and
please don't fire me please please ESPN I cannot go back to working the 'guess my PER' booth at the harlem globetrotters summertime bash carnivale. Please ESPN, please!"
This is why I cannot stand
John Hollinger sometimes. He allows his own defense of his system to get in the way of a good article. I think the defense of "The 68-69 Celtics were way better than their record anyways so they don't count either" is fundamentally invalid. Then, to couple it with an 'I told you so' at the end is just self serving. Instead of being our statistical tour guide through the NBA wilderness, he's becoming like
an egotistical NBA referee that thinks because of the unchecked influence (in Hollinger's case it's his ESPN carte-blanche) they have, they can make the facts be whatever they think they 'should' be.