Homer38 wrote:bledredwine wrote:In Lebron’s 10 finals, on four occasions, the player Lebron guarded (or chose not to guard at his own position in the cop out against KD) won finals MVP.
So in 40% of his finals appearances, Lebron’s small forward finals matchup won finals MVP. That includes Andre Iguodala. Talk about defensive prowess.
Iggy won the final mvp because he was the only reason why that LeBron did not score 40 points per game in that finals.....The cavs were up 2-1 despite a complete depleted roster before Iggy was in the starting lineup and one of the other reason also why Iggy won the FMVP was because he was able to hit the wide open shot that the cavs were conceded to him
I think a really underrated part of Iguodala winning Finals MVP was that he also was the 3rd leading scorer in the series. If he’d scored anywhere near his season-average of 8 points a game, he really would not have been Finals MVP. Instead, he scored 16.3 points a game—which was easily his highest-scoring scoring average of any playoff series in his entire time on the Warriors. And he did it on pretty high efficiency (highest TS% of any player with meaningful minutes in the entire series, except for Mozgov). I’m in the camp that thinks Steph should’ve been Finals MVP, but Iguodala doing abnormally well offensively definitely had a lot to do with him getting it.
LeBron was 57% from the field and 51% from 3 in 2014....The spurs won because they were 54% from the field and 47% from 3....Jordan never face a offense like that who are elite on defense in the 1990s like the spurs and the warriors
LeBron scored very efficiently in the 2014 Finals, though his playmaking was definitely subpar for him (both these things were probably at least in part a result of the Spurs defensive gameplan). The overall result was that the Heat did not have a very good offensive performance overall. But it’d be harsh to really blame that on LeBron, and you’re right that the Spurs won so easily because they shot incredibly well. But who had the highest TS% on the Spurs? It was Kawhi Leonard—with a massive 75.3% TS%. Like with Iguodala, that was LeBron’s man (though obviously with switches no one is someone’s man all the time). You suggest the Spurs offense was just too good, but they scored way more efficiently against the Heat than they did in any of their prior series. And Kawhi definitely ate more against the Heat than in any other series—in fact, Kawhi had had a genuinely pretty rough series in the conference finals against the Thunder. And it’s worth noting that this came after a season in which impact data tells us LeBron was mediocre defensively.
Jordan never had a defensive series like LeBron had vs Bulls in 2011 or in 2016 vs warriors....Not even close
Not sure that’s really true, but to some extent we don’t really have existing data for Jordan’s individual defensive performances to back up an argument either way on that. What people are talking about here is consistency though. The Bulls were a consistently great defensive team, and Jordan played consistently well on the defensive end. That’s not actually the case with LeBron. He could play really well defensively, but he could also be bad defensively—and the downstream effect of this is that Jordan’s teams were more consistent defensively. Yes, part of that is Jordan’s supporting cast usually having more defensive talent (though the flip side is having less offensive talent, by the way), but it isn’t just about that. Whether it’s due to energy-conservation or something else, LeBron definitely was a less consistent defensive player.