oaktownwarriors87 wrote:ty 4191 wrote:LeBron played in a league that expanded once in 19 seasons. And, by 1 team, once, in 2004-2005.
Jordan played in a league that expanded 3 times within 7 seasons. And, by SIX teams, 1988-1989 through 1995-1996. 23 vs. 29 teams.
How did Jordan's teams do against those Expansion Teams? How much did they weaken the league and allow him to dominate more than LeBron has?
The 90s was an expansion league. Michael Jordan won his six rings in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, and 1998. He had two three-peat performances that were separated by a short stint in baseball. While many believe this solidifies him as the greatest, they often fail to look at the league surrounding him at the time. Between the years of 1988 and 1995, the NBA expanded. Six teams were added: the Hornets (1988), Heat (1988), Magic (1989), Timberwolves (1989), Raptors (1995), and Grizzlies (1995). The following stats cover the time between their creation as a team and their first playoff appearance. They include their overall game record, the number of games played against Jordan, the overall record of Jordan vs. the team in those years, and their playoff record against each other (if applicable).
Charlotte Hornets
First Playoff Appearance: 1993
Overall Game Record, 1988–1993: 140–270 (.341)
Bulls Record vs. Hornets 1988-1993: 18-3 (.857)
Miami Heat
First playoff appearance: 1992
Overall game record, 1988–1992: 95–233 (.290)
Bulls Record vs. Heat 1988-1992: 17-0 (1.00)
Orlando Magic
First playoff appearance: 1994
Overall game record, 1989-1994: 106–249 (.299)
Bulls Record vs. Magic 1988-1994: 13-6 (.684)
Minnesota Timberwolves
First playoff appearance: 1997
Overall game record, 1989-1997: 192–464 (.293)
Bulls Record vs. Timberwolves 1989-1997: 16-0 (1.00)
Toronto Raptors
First playoff appearance: 2000
Overall game record, 1995–2000: 135–243 (.357)
Bulls Record vs. Raptors 1995-1998: 10-2 (.833)
Memphis Grizzlies
Grizzlies
First playoff appearance: 2004
Overall game record, 1995–2002: 101–418 (.195)
Bulls Record vs. Grizzlies 1995-1998: 6-0 (1.00)
Overall Record vs. Expansion Teams: 80-11 (.879)
League Depth:
If you look at LeBron's entire prime- let's say, 2007-2008 through 2019-2020:
1. % of teams below .500, overall: 12 out of 30 (40%)
2. % of teams below .400, overall: 4 out of 30 (13.3%)
3. % of teams below .300, overall: 0 out of 30 (worst team was the TWolves at .342 WPCT)
If you look at Jordan 1988-1989 through 1997-1998:
1. % of teams below .500, overall: 16 out of 29 (55.2%)
2. % of teams below .400, overall: 10 out of 29 (34.5%)
3. % of teams below .300, overall: 2 out of 29 (6.9%, Grizzlies .195 WPCT)
Added to that, we have globalization and the flourishing/advanced scouting and player development of international players. Prime Jordan hardly played against any international players, LeBron has played against a huge percentage of his games against the best player from THROUGHOUT the globe, and, a ton of superstars, especially the entire second half of his career.
Apologies to those who have seen this already, but, the contrast in depth of talent is staggering, IMO:
The NBA now features 140 international players from 40 countries on 6 different continents. Compare that with 1988-1998 and you'll see just how much better the NBA is today.
Jordans teams were consistently the best team in the NBA. LeBrons we're consistently top 5. There's huge difference between the two.
^ Yes, there is a huge difference in the quality of their support casts relative to the rest of the league. Good job!
As with every time you spam this manipulated and questionably accurate “metric” — I wonder which of the 6.5-SRS 2011 Bulls, the 6.4-SRS 2012 Thunder, the 6.7-SRS 2013 Spurs, the 10.4-SRS 2016 Warriors, and the 7.3-SRS 2018 Raptors (lol) you are leaving out of Lebron’s record there
Not sure why you want to set out this niche for yourself as the Golden State version of JordansBulls, but it is a pretty bad look.








