WarriorGM wrote:ShaqAttac wrote:DB23 wrote:
Honestly speaking, your argument wasn’t very convincing. I was hoping for more.
Really all you said is longevity and then some reaching arguments and false equivalence.
I don’t really want to go through the whole Pc board thread. Can someone present the best lebron argument here so we can review? What’s been posted so far is pretty weak.
nah reachin is tryna use all-stars to say a team that was very good without mj wasnt actually very good. imagine thinkin all-stars matters more than winning. cavs were bad without lebron and then beat a 73 win team with him. lebron was winning 60 n 66 b2b with less help than mj needed just to win 50. bron a way better defender n better attacker so idk what the confusion is.
there was a good take down in the top 10 overrated thread. idk where that is
Funny seeing people making a big deal about beating a 73-win team that was down a starter for the last 3 games of their series and who had its best player returning from injuries earlier in the playoffs is made into a big deal but actually leading a team to 70+ wins isn't.
This is something that has long confused me. LeBron beating the 2016 Warriors is held up by many as his greatest accomplishment—the thing that made him the GOAT. And I do think it was impressive. But what does that say about Steph Curry that beating Steph’s team was the greatest accomplishment of the apparent GOAT? This wasn’t the KD Warriors. It was Steph Curry (who had been injured in the playoffs), Draymond Green (who missed a game), Klay Thompson, and some good depth (which wasn’t even exactly the case once Bogut was injured in the finals). While Draymond was definitely having his best season ever, this wasn’t a supporting cast that on paper would compete with the most talented teams of all time. For reference, throughout that era, even with KD, they were basically a .500 team by wins and SRS without Curry. And yet, they won 73 games, and beating them was such an accomplishment that it was the crowning achievement of the greatest player of all time. Surely, the conclusion from that would be that Steph Curry deserves *immense* credit for causing his team to be so good that beating them was the greatest accomplishment in basketball history? But, oddly, I find that people who most extol LeBron’s achievement of beating that team are often somehow also people who don’t think super highly of Curry. It doesn’t make much sense to me.