Red Auerbach was a symbol of great coaching, but today, I am the greatest of all time.

Phil Jackson is no Ricky Henderson, but the message is the same. Red Auerbach has been the standard for all coaches in the N.B.A. He set the bar high, winning nine championships with the Boston Celtics. He built a franchise in a day where you couldn't buy players through free-agency and you had to get your players through good scouting and strategy in the draft. Red Auerbach did something that no one else will ever do. His accomplishments will always rank among the best in any sport.
If you follow sports, which I assume you do since you're reading this thread, you've heard for years the comparison between Phil Jackson and Red Auerbach. Today, they stood even, nine championship trophies raised each. Tonight, Phil Jackson won his tenth, giving him a ring for every finger. Does that number alone, ten, move Phil Jackson ahead of Red Auerbach as the greatest coach of all time? I say that yes, it does.
It's been said of Phil Jackson whenever this discussion comes about that he's been in the right place and in the right time. He's walked in to Chicago and had Michael Jordan, and in L.A. he's had Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal, three of the greatest to ever play the game. However, I don't see this as a knock against him. He brought in Pippen to compliment Jordan, as well as other role players. Jackson put players like Horry and Fischer around Kobe and Shaq. He's had the core, but he's built around them and put the right pieces in place for a championship team. It wasn't just the stars that did it. After he left L.A. the Lakers failed to make the playoffs. When Jackson returned the following year, he coached the mediocre team, aside from Kobe Bryant, to a seventh-seed playoff berth. He also took Bryant, who he had deemed uncoachable, and made him in to a complete player. He molded Bryant into a passer, a defender, and a hustler, rather than just a scorer.
Phil Jackson has also had the benefit of free-agency, where Red Auerbach didn't have that to take advantage of. However much of a benefit it may have been for Jackson, he also had to worry about holding on to his stars. Jackson lost Shaq and for the longest time, Kobe wanted out of L.A. Red Auerbach never had to worry about losing Bill Russel or his other stars and future Hall-of-Famers Tom Heinsohn and K.C. Jones.
This issue has been analyzed forwards and backwards. I say that Jackson, tonight, became the greatest coach of all time. What do you think?