McBubbles wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Colbinii wrote:
LeBron played 82 games in 2018 and posted 27/8/9 with a roster that was messed up due to Kyrie Irving requesting out.
We all know this wasn't LeBron's fault, given the history Kyrie has shown since then.
I have a hard time seeing the argument for "LeBron basically took the RS off".
Did you not see game 1? How did LeBron not give the Warriors a fight? Oh, you mean the pathetic roster of Cleveland didn't give them a fight?
Okay, so some thing to take note of:
1. While the logic of "He had no Kyrie, so he had nobody!" seems to make sense superficially, the reality is that the Cavs did BETTER without LeBron in '17-18 than they did in '14-15, '15-16 or '16-17 - LeBron's 3 years with Kyrie.
The team got worse because of their LeBron minutes. The prior 3 years when LeBron was on the floor, they had the +/- of a title contender. In '17-18 that dropped down to +1.4, he had his worst On/Off of his entire career, and he didn't lead his team in +/- for the first time since '10-11.
This is not anything that can be explained by the loss of Kyrie directly.
2. I think we have to remember that LeBron pulled one of his "I'm done with these role players, get me a new team ASAP or else" moves. If my count is correct, the Cavs ended up trading 6 of their players and multiple draft picks away before the deadline to please LeBron.
If we divide that Cavs RS into 3 chunks, it looks like this:
23-8
7-12
20-10
So this wasn't a situation where the team was left utterly lost from the start of the year but LeBron scrapped them together and they made the playoffs. They started off for nearly half the season playing at a #1 seed pace (for the East), and only then did the wheels come off...only to be put back on again after the team did what LeBron wanted, trading half the team and those future assets.
What did they get for capitulating? A re-engaged LeBron and another finals appearance.
What would they have gotten if LeBron just kept playing hard with a good attitude all year? Probably a finals appearance, and a better set of assets in the years beyond after LeBron kicked the franchise to the curb.
3. How can he coast when putting up 27/8/9? The same way Doncic can put up 40/10/10 and not really lift his team all that much. These heliocentric guys rack up numbers like crazy even when they aren't playing their best, and of course this is particularly true on defense, where in '17-18 the Cavs were ranked 29th in DRtg, and had a considerably worse rating than that when LeBron was on the floor.
4. Did I not see Game 1 of the Finals? I did, and I also know that after giving the Warriors one good fight LeBron went and punched the wall because he was a mad at a teammate making a mistake and ended up breaking his hand, and essentially handing the rest of the series to the Warriors without challenge.
A Warriors' team that was full of negative KD energy that hadn't swept anyone in the playoffs to that point and was pushed to the brink in the previous round, nearly losing, and expending everything to win in 7. Simply put, this was not a team that should have won the Finals in a sweep, and had LeBron in the Cavs put up a stubborn fight extending the series, I'd see what they did as more of an accomplishment than I do.
The reality is that this in the end was a Cavs team that did better without LeBron than prior incarnations and with him amounted to 1st round West fodder in the playoffs, which also was forced to rip apart their team and their assets to please a superstar who then left them with that mess at year's end.
I completely understand seeing LeBron as still the most capable basketball player in the world and pointing to Game 1 as proof of that capability, but in terms of what he accomplished for his team that year, the best I can say is that I'd consider him the top player in the East.
Not gonna address off the court issues, only the bolded.
1. I don't put much stock into the defence being ranked 29th on account of the Cavs having the worst defence in NBA history (at that point) the following year. Also a large bulk of your argument seems to be that the 2018 Cavs supporting cast is actually better than the 2017 Cavs and maybe even previous supporting cast, which I highly doubt. I typically hate when people ignore useful stats on favour of eye test but I saw nothing that suggested that sans Lebron's the 2018 Cavs are a better playoff team with better Championship odds than their predecessors. Their core was the same as the previous years but just worse (especially on defence) and Kyrie-less. Jr Smith, Thompson and Korver regressed massively whilst regular season improvements like Clarkson were disastrous in the playoffs. They might have for a single season, performed better, but they weren't better.
2. "The reality is that this in the end was a Cavs team that did better without LeBron than prior incarnations and with him amounted to 1st round West fodder in the playoffs".
Again this is a very very oddly constructed statement. The 18 Cavs doing better without Lebron than previous teams doesn't mean much of anything, cuz the previous Cavs are sucked without Lebron. A 2/10 is better than a 1/10, but still trash. Hell they sucked WITH Lebron let alone without him. And again the implication is that Lebron's supporting cast improved but his team results didn't, therefore Lebron made his team worse, which is ridiculous because in reality his supporting cast clearly got worse from the years before, a single season worth of on-off data doesn't change that. So it's not even a 2/10 being better than a 1/10, it's a 0/10 temporarily performing like a 2/10 against worse competition.
Then you say that the 2018 Cavs shouldn't have gotten swept by the 2018 Warriors because this Warriors team was underachieving, evidence for this being that they didn't sweep everyone for second year in a row , and then got pushed to a game 7 by one of the best teams in NBA history? Wat??? The Warriors went from a 10/10 to a 9/10. Why would the Warriors going from a 10/10 to a 9/10 mean that Lebron taking a game from them with his 2/10 supporting cast is something that should have happened?
+/- showing that the 2018 Cavs performed better without Lebron in a season Lebron missed zero games with the smallest sample size up to that point than the other Cavs teams doesn't mean much, they still sucked, especially compared to the 2018 Warriors and compared to all the competition the 2018 Warriors faced. That's like me going from not being able to defeat a tank with a sword, to me still not being able to defeat a tank with a bigger sword, and then saying I underachieved, as if that negligible improvement should have been enough to overcome the odds. This is also after seeing that tank blow up another tank. Lebron's supporting cast was so ass that they barely got out of the first round of the Eastern Conference WITH him whilst Curry's supporting cast was so incredible that they likely could have won the Finals without him, and we're talking about "Lebron shouldn't have gotten swept cuz the 2018 Warriors were worse and cuz +/- suggests the 2018 Cavs should have actually been better than the 15-17 Cavs", what?
+ Once again isn't this a Curry comparison? Lebron lost a game in which he put up a 51 point near triple double and Curry won a game whilst getting hunted on defence and putting up 11 points on 31.0TS%. Curry missing 31 more games than Lebron, an entire round of the playoffs and having, when taking into account the degree of difficulty, one of the worst games in Finals history = better than Lebron that year?
Curry in 2018 played 66 games compared to Lebron's 104, meaning Lebron played an extra 58% of the season lmao. So Curry playing MUCH fewer games, less minutes a game, whilst on one of the most stacked teams of all time, and with much less responsibility looked better than Lebron? Ok? Am I supposed to take that at face value? I can't think of a player who would come out looking worse than Lebron in those comparable circumstances.
Key thing I want to emphasize:
When I bring up a stat that points in a particular direction, I'm not saying that that stat alone should be discussed as defining the entirety of the situation.
I bring up the fact that the Cavs actually did better without LeBron in '17-18 than in other years because the implication of what people had said prior to that was that LeBron was still doing his thing just the same way before but his supporting cast was so much worse that this explained the dropoff. Were that the case, we'd expect to see insane On/Off numbers from LeBron, but instead we saw the least impressive On/Off of his entire career.
Hence, what I'm saying is not a general statement about LeBron in that year but a specific rebuttal to what others are putting forward. To put things more explicitly:
Given that there is no On/Off indicator to support the idea that the Cavs got worse that year simply because of supporting cast, and inf act the simplistic first pass seems to say the opposite, how can others take their analysis a step further to support their initial statement while dealing with the fact that the superficial data doesn't support them at all?
Re: LeBron scored 51 points! Listen, if LeBron was doing that every game things would be different. What I'm pointing out is that people are taking one big game where his team loss as proof that he accomplished more than anyone else that year, and I think that's problematic.