OhayoKD wrote:lessthanjake wrote:Iwasawitness wrote:
Only one creating a fake narrative here is you. Hell, that’s pretty much all you do with your anti-LeBron arguments.
Chicago didn’t land him in free agency, they traded for him. They did it specifically because they needed to replace Horace Grant who they lost in 94.
Rodman was the difference between Chicago becoming a better team than Orlando, that’s 100% true. Being a black hole on offense didn’t stop him from positively impacting the Bulls and turning them into an all time great team. Without him, they don’t go to the finals that year, let alone win 72 games. This is just a fact.
There’s way too much confidence on that assessment, to the point of ridiculousness. Rodman was not actually all that good by the time he was on the Bulls. Sure, he was better than Will Perdue (who they traded to get Rodman), so he was definitely a notable upgrade to the team. But he was not actually a particularly great player. He wasn’t even really the third best player on the second-three-peat Bulls (that was Kukoc).
Notably, Rodman missed a lot of games in 1996 and 1997, and the Bulls defense was still elite in the games he missed, so we know the defense was amazing without him. In fact, the Bulls in the games Rodman missed in the 1996 season actually had a slightly *better* rDRTG than they had in the games he played. And they went 15-3 without him in 1995-96, followed by going 21-6 without him in 1996-97. And they were 2-0 without him in 1997-98. Of course, overall, that indicates he did move the needle some, but it also strongly indicates that those second-three-peat Bulls were a historically great team even without Rodman. Indeed, they won at a 66-win pace in quite a lot of games without Rodman! Furthermore, the Bulls still won the title in 1998, despite the fact that by those playoffs Rodman was very clearly washed, and was pulled from the starting lineup and wouldn’t play meaningful time in the NBA ever again. Similarly, the Bulls won the title in 1997, despite Rodman being an abysmal, clear negative player in the playoffs. Seems pretty obvious that the second-three-peat Bulls were quite a lot better than the Jordan-just-back-from-retirement 1995 Bulls, regardless of Rodman. The main difference-maker was having a non-rusty Jordan.
The cavs and celtics both had a better record without kyrie than with kyrie before and after Lebron beat a 73-win team with him.
"Look how team did without teammate" is one of many losing arguments for Jordan vs Lebron
This is a non-sequitur that has nothing to do with whether Dennis Rodman was the reason that the second-three-peat Bulls were an all-time great team. He was not.
In any event, it is worth noting that in 2015-2017, the Cavaliers had a +7.38 net rating in RS games with LeBron+Kyrie and a +4.63 net rating in RS games with LeBron and no Kyrie. And, once Kyrie left, the Cavaliers were only able to muster a 0.59 SRS in 2018, and were easily swept in the Finals. They also lost in the 2015 Finals with Kyrie out the vast majority of the series. So Kyrie did move the needle for them. If you think the Cavaliers were an all-time-great team before Kyrie left (more on that below), then you’d certainly need to wonder why, unlike with the Bulls and Rodman, they really didn’t play like an all-time great team in games without Kyrie. As noted above, they had a +4.63 net rating in games with LeBron but no Kyrie. That’s good, but certainly not all-time great at all. They then had a 0.59 SRS (and +1.0 net rating) in a season without Kyrie. That’s not even good, let alone all-time great. And they lost in the 2015 Finals with Kyrie out. They were also absolutely destroyed in the 2018 Finals without Kyrie. The Cavaliers did not even remotely play like an all-time-great team without Kyrie. The only even remotely impressive thing they achieved without Kyrie was walloping the 2018 Raptors in the second round, but hanging your hat on a series against the DeRozan-led Raptors would just obviously be silly. So the fact is that the Cavaliers were clearly not an all-time great team without Kyrie, so if you think they were an all-time-great team with Kyrie (I think they clearly were not, as explained further below, but I’m assuming they were for purposes of this point), then we have very good reason to believe that Kyrie caused them to be an all-time great team. Of course, the same would be true of LeBron, but Kyrie would clearly be a necessary component here too. Which is not the case for Rodman, given that the Bulls won at a 66-win pace without him in the second-three-peat years.
Anyways, all of this is essentially irrelevant to a discussion about creating all-time-great teams, because LeBron’s Cavs never were actually an all-time great team, even with Kyrie. The claim here basically just bootstraps off of the greatness of Steph’s Warriors—with some transitive-property argument being made that the 2016 Cavs must have been an all-time-great team because they beat the 2016 Warriors. But, of course, the best player on the 2016 Warriors had been injured earlier in the playoffs, and they’d almost lost in the conference finals (and were actually outscored in the series), so the Warriors were pretty obviously not playing at an all-time-great level themselves in those playoffs. Playoffs are played in small samples, and teams don’t usually play at exactly their average level in a small sample (whether in playoffs or the regular season). Which means that one series does not render a team an all-time-great team (nor is an all-time great team always playing like one in a given playoff series), and it certainly doesn’t when we have very good reason to believe that the opposing team wasn’t playing as well as normal. Overall, the 2015-2017 Cavs put up a SRS’s of 4.08, 5.45, and 2.87. They never even won more than 57 regular season games. That is not even close to all-time great. Even that aforementioned +7.38 net rating in games with LeBron+Kyrie both playing is very good, but not all-time great (and definitely not given that we’re assuming the two best players are both healthy—almost all teams will tend to have a higher net rating than normal when you make that stipulation, so the bar for all-time-great there is higher). Meanwhile, the teams that they did beat in the Eastern Conference playoffs in those years were…not very impressive. Credit to the Cavs for generally winning easily, but you’ll be fighting an incredibly uphill battle to convince all but the most committed LeBron partisans that easily dispatching those teams made the Cavs an all-time great team.