Steve Kerr was a great three-point specialist during his career. He finished his time in the NBA with a whopping five championship rings, three with the '96-'98 Chicago Bulls and two more with the Spurs after that.The so-called "basketball legend" Larry Bird, in his whole career, had only three rings with the Boston Celtics. Kerr was obviously the better player due to his ability to win when it mattered.
As stupid as this sounds, this argument has been laid out in the wake of Kobe winning his fifth title to LeBron's zero, in spite of James' statistical superiority. It's advanced in other sports too, in terms of Brady vs. Manning, and countless other comparisons. The concept of "team sports" appears to be lost on those making the argument, as a thousand factors go into winning a title, including eras of expansion teams, luck, officiating, injuries, quality of opposition, free agency, etc. Charles Barkley, John Stockton, Karl Malone, and Patrick Ewing were all great players who never won a ring.
Kobe wasn't even the best player on the team when three of his rings were won, Shaq was. Any benchwarmer can win a title if his teammates do the work.
Bottom line: when comparing players, it's the play on the field or court, not the championship count.
As stupid as this sounds, this argument has been laid out in the wake of Kobe winning his fifth title to LeBron's zero, in spite of James' statistical superiority. It's advanced in other sports too, in terms of Brady vs. Manning, and countless other comparisons. The concept of "team sports" appears to be lost on those making the argument, as a thousand factors go into winning a title, including eras of expansion teams, luck, officiating, injuries, quality of opposition, free agency, etc. Charles Barkley, John Stockton, Karl Malone, and Patrick Ewing were all great players who never won a ring.
Kobe wasn't even the best player on the team when three of his rings were won, Shaq was. Any benchwarmer can win a title if his teammates do the work.
Bottom line: when comparing players, it's the play on the field or court, not the championship count.