HeartBreakKid wrote:GC Pantalones wrote:-snip-
I totally disagree with your point about James playing against weaker competition.
For one, Kevin Durant and Chris Paul are not chop liver. Kevin Durant is probably the top 20 best basketball players if we're talking peak. There are people who think Chris Paul's peak is even better than Magic's, and many more who think it is second at the very least. If we're talking actual impact, both guys are with in the top 25 best players ever. Durant would have been MVP many years other than this one.
That's why I singled them out. Those two are amazing. Not top 20 I'd say both are in the 20-30 range in their peak years but Paul hasn't been at his peak in 5 years. 2012 Paul probably isn't top 35. Also anyone putting peak Paul over Magic needs to stop watching boxscores. Chris Paul is amazing and for a PG I'll give him a top 5 peak but he's not Magic, Oscar, or Nash and he hasn't really separated himself from peak Isiah Thomas. If we are talking impact KD might hit top 25 (probably in the 20-25 range) and Paul from before his injury would be top 25 (he was 22 in the peak project from 2 years ago).
I have a hard time believing that the league is not better than it was 10 years ago, much less 40-50 years, or however far back you want to go. I'm in the belief that a star will more or less be a star no matter what, because what makes stars is that they are so much better than the average player that they are like Gods amongst men. However, the typical roleplayer in the NBA is clearly getting better as the years go by. How can it be other wise?
Well I think the level of play is about even with the early to mid 80s. The late 80's/early 90's is a different story though. It's the best era in terms of stars and if you look at any list of the best drafts ever they'll be dominated by the mid 80's and early 90's draft classes.
More people are playing basketball, from more countries, more techniques are being introduced (albeit not many, as basketball has largely stayed the same for along time), better quality athletes, better quality training. I have a hard time seeing the league from head to toe being weaker than say the NBA in the 90s during its expansion era. The NBA in the 70s is the only exception because a lot of the talent went to the ABA.
There are more players now but is that a good thing? It seems those extra players in the league now are all projects. Back in the day most people didn't sign young scrubs to develop them they'd rather have proven vets and proven NCAA athletes. That makes a large difference.
Most of all, are we forgetting that James played against the best players of the 2000s?
Chris Paul and Kevin Durant might be his competition during his championship years, but...what about before that?
Did Lebron James not play against Dirk Nowitzki in his prime, and was James not considered a better player than him? In 08, 09 and 10 - even 2011 during the RS, that was the general consensus, one could argue that just because ti is the consensus doesn't mean it is right, however it's pretty clear to see that pre peak Lebron James was as good as the best players from the 2000s, a smidget worse, but James is a much better player now than what he was as a Cav.
James played against Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan, D-Wade, Nowitzki and Steve Nash, when all of them were in his prime. He was either considered better than some, or as good as them all. From 06-10 all of those players were more or less in their primes, or at the very least had prime years, and James was either an MVP run away or an MVP candidate in all of those years, and that was him before his peak.
So I don't get the competition argument. If James competed with the who's who of the 2000s before his peak, why does that diminish that he is dominating the competition in the 2010s? The only real great player of the 2000s whos prime didn't properly align with James was Shaquile O'Neal. Other than that, James looked as good as anyone else.
He should look great/better than them that's why he's being discussed. My point in bringing that up was that people were talking down Magic (he wasn't even better than Bird for half his career) and Hakeem (he only won after Jordan left and the Sonics lost/Robinson and Ewing were better at times) like those same points could't be used for Lebron (he wasn't better than Wade most his early career and he wasn't the best player in the league for a while). Overall if you want to see these as negatives look at how the same type of arguments can be applied to all 3 guys receiving votes.
Also, you're discrediting James MVP seasons, and then citing things like Shaq's competition being old Karl Malone, Gary Payton and Zo? Seriously? How on earth is Kevin Durant and Chris Paul inferior competition to those guys? How is Zo great competition to you, yet you do not even mention Dwight Howard who has played against James his entire career?
Peak ZO > Peak Howard (who I didn't include because he got hurt in 2012 and was never the same).
Gary Payton in 2000 was about as good as Paul now.
Old Malone was MVP Malone so I don't know why his age would be an issue. His 5 year prime was from ages 32-36 and he won MVP the season before that (yes he was better than both Paul and maybe KD in 2012).