Stalwart wrote:tsherkin wrote:Stalwart wrote:But DWade and Chris Bosh also had to limit their games...
Seems like a pattern.
I've never understood how people fail to understand this situation.
Lebron was better than Wade or Bosh ever were, so his primacy was guaranteed. There are only so many shots, so much time on the clock, only so many opportunities for isos. You don't just linearly add scoring average when you combine stars. It was a foregone conclusion that Wade wasn't going to be chasing a scoring title and that Bosh wasn't going to be a 20+ ppg player. Bosh in Toronto was a slow isolation player who spent a lot of time jab-stepping. He wasn't going to fill that role in Miami. Anyone with eyes knew that. Lebron haters love to look at how other stars didn't maintain their scoring average when they joined him, but what on Earth did they think was going to happen? Same deal with Kevin Love.
It's nonsense, and always has been, to grief Lebron for other star players not matching their scoring output. No one said boo when Pierce went from 25 ppg to 19 ppg alongside Garnett in 2008. And Ray Allen from 26 to 16 (or if you like, 34 to 25.6 PTS100 for Ray and 35 to 29 for Pierce). That wouldn't have served the narrative. When you put three volume scores on the same team, they can each use only so many possessions. It was always a horrifically bad, disingenuous argument.
Well good thing Im not talking about scoring. Im talking about impact and teammate empowerment. When I say DWade and Chris Bosh had to limit their games Im not talking about limiting their scoring. Thats just a byproduct. Im not talking about them having to change their games, move away from their strengths, and develop new skills. Bosh had to turn himself into a spot up shooter. Wade had to pick and choose his opportunities to contribute. All so Lebron can max out his own impact.
Please clarify what you mean about this outside of scoring. You threw a bunch of buzzwords in there but no actual analysis of how they were negatively impacted outside of their scoring.
How come Lebron can't better adjust his game to others while also maintaining his own impact?
Curious how you feel Jordan would adjust his obsession over winning the scoring title next to Wade and Bosh or Kyrie and Love.
Why can't he empower his teammates to be contributors
He does.
creators, and decision makers?
Because unlike Jordan he is top five ever at both. But even then, the idea that Lebron never plays offball to accommodate teammates is a fabrication.
Why can't he play in a way that encorporates the strengths of his co-stars rather than oppress them? Wouldn't that lead to a more diverse and resilient offense and overall team? Wouldn't that help the team perform better when Lebron's not on the floor? And wouldn't that ultimately lead to more NBA championships?
Because unlike Jordan he has not had perfectly complementary teams, crazy how that goes.
Again, Pau didn't have to limit his game playing with Kobe. Kobe, due to his diverse skillset and portability as a player, could play off of Pau's stregths as a post player. Due to his elite mid range game and ability to play off ball Pau could utilize his own strengths as a scorer and playmaker. Odom as well.
Do you feel this describes Bosh or Love well?
The closest description to this offball skillset is Davis… we saw how badly that failed, right.
Role players were empowered.
?????? Lebron James, famously bad for roleplayers.
That made the Lakers a more resilient offensive team. A stronger team that wasn't 100% reliant on Kobe.
Oh cool back to saying all of Lebron’s incredibly eite teammates just became so reliant on him that they could not possibly play well without him.
Same thing with Jordan and Pippen.
Jordan and Pippen were about as complementary as Kyrie and Lebron or Davis and Lebron, except in this situation Pippen is acting more in Lebron’s role.
Same thing with Magic
Yes portability god Magic Johnson.
and Bird and their co stars. Curry
Neither Jordan nor Lebron are as portable as Bird or Curry.
That said — have you seen how Golden State plays without Curry?

Being a one man show is not the best way to play basketball. Although Lebron is probably the best one man show it still leads to an overall lower ceiling for your team.
Why can't you guys understand this?
We can, but you fail to understand that not all “two-man shows” or “three-man shows” are identical.