LogGrad98
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Even Wilt had top-notch teammates in his championships. In '67 he had Hal Greer, one of the best play-makers and scorers in the league, who averaged 26ppg, 8 rpg, and 6 apg in the finals, where Wilt averaged 17 ppg, (an insane) 28 rpg, and 6 apg in that series. And others in that series who were multiple year all-stars. And in '72 Wilt had an all-time supporting cast including Goodrich and the Logo. If anything in the finals Wilt won you could argue for the other side of this discussion, that the teams he faced had no consensus top 10 players, but were team concept groups that didn't have the transcendent stars to get them over the top, especially in '72 where the best player on the knicks was Walt Frazier, who wasn't even on Goodrich's level and Goodrich was probably the 3rd best player on that Lakers team that year, and it showed in the fact that the Lakers won that series 4-1. The '67 team faced stiffer competition in a Warriors team lead by Rick Barry and Nate Thurmond (who nearly matched Wilt by the way with a line of 14/26/3), who just wasn't enough to transcend the Wilt and Greer combo. Even with Barry averaging an insane 40 ppg in that series, including putting up 55 pts in a game 3 Warriors win.You dont need a perennial top 10 guy. You need a guy who can perform on that level if given the opportunity, and then you play as a team to set him (and others) up for success. You need players who lead on both ends of the court, and players who play in a way that elevates their teammates. Its also not about whether you play selfish offense or kumbayyah ball, the most important is that individual player skillsets are maximized and that the players boost each other.
Diva ball however is a dead horse no one should beat. There are no players other than Wilt in the history who have carried their team singlehandedly. Even MJ had a great supporting cast when he was dominant.
So even the greatest players almost always have another top 20 to top 10 player as support. Steph had Klay. LBJ had multiple over the years. You could almost argue that the Time Duncan spurs were the ultimate example of a single top 10 player and a transcendent team concept winning the ring without other top 10 support, although you could probably argue that Manu was a top 20 player, but from stats and such he really wasn't. Top 25 maybe.
Otherwise it is almost always a top 10 and top 20 (at least) player duo or trio that wins the rings.