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Part 2
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lessthanjake wrote:According to PBPstats, LeBron went 23 of 35 on rim FGs. Since he went 32 of 90 overall in the series, that means that he shot 9 of 55 on shots that weren’t at the rim. Four of those were threes, so that is an effective FG% of 20% on shots that weren’t at the rim, in the 2007 Finals. Genuinely just absolutely awful. And the Spurs were giving him those shots, rather than them being shots with people draped all over him. The Spurs exposed an absolutely gaping flaw in LeBron’s game. He never entirely fixed it, though this was probably the problem at its worst.
Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:According to PBPstats, LeBron went 23 of 35 on rim FGs. Since he went 32 of 90 overall in the series, that means that he shot 9 of 55 on shots that weren’t at the rim. Four of those were threes, so that is an effective FG% of 20% on shots that weren’t at the rim, in the 2007 Finals. Genuinely just absolutely awful. And the Spurs were giving him those shots, rather than them being shots with people draped all over him. The Spurs exposed an absolutely gaping flaw in LeBron’s game. He never entirely fixed it, though this was probably the problem at its worst.
The Cavs had a woeful -3.2 rORtg in that series.
And the Spurs always had a strategy to just give Lebron the outside shot. Even in the 2014 Finals, when he was on fire from 3pt range (IIRC like 55%) Pop was happy to concede those shots. Why?!? Because it kept Lebron away from the rim and when he doesn't get to the rim, he doesn't collapse the defense which gives open shots to all the shooters. Lebron's creation volume was thus drastically reduced against the Spurs as a result.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
MavsDirk41 wrote:The guy with 2 3 peats
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:According to PBPstats, LeBron went 23 of 35 on rim FGs. Since he went 32 of 90 overall in the series, that means that he shot 9 of 55 on shots that weren’t at the rim. Four of those were threes, so that is an effective FG% of 20% on shots that weren’t at the rim, in the 2007 Finals. Genuinely just absolutely awful. And the Spurs were giving him those shots, rather than them being shots with people draped all over him. The Spurs exposed an absolutely gaping flaw in LeBron’s game. He never entirely fixed it, though this was probably the problem at its worst.
The Cavs had a woeful -3.2 rORtg in that series.
And the Spurs always had a strategy to just give Lebron the outside shot. Even in the 2014 Finals, when he was on fire from 3pt range (IIRC like 55%) Pop was happy to concede those shots. Why?!? Because it kept Lebron away from the rim and when he doesn't get to the rim, he doesn't collapse the defense which gives open shots to all the shooters. Lebron's creation volume was thus drastically reduced against the Spurs as a result.
Yup. LeBron is a streaky shooter, so when his shot is on he can be unstoppable (see, for example, the 2009 playoffs). But he’s not actually a very good shooter overall, so him being “on” isn’t the norm, and playing him like this was successful. With more space in later years (i.e. second-stint CLE onwards), I will say it started to become harder to keep him away from the rim, which made this strategy harder to successfully use.
lessthanjake wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:The guy with 2 3 peats
He’s about to have another three-peat: This time, a three-peat of victories in “RGM GOAT Debate Thread” votes.
lessthanjake wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:The guy with 2 3 peats
He’s about to have another three-peat: This time, a three-peat of victories in “RGM GOAT Debate Thread” votes.
raf1995 wrote:I just don’t think he has that kind of potential. I think we will regret not trading him for a haul in a few years when he’s a mid-tier starter with nice playmaking and defense and a shaky jumper.
AlexanderRight wrote:And that's one of the biggest differences that sets MJ apart. We never saw him compromised as a player. There was never a time we looked at him and thought "he should have done more" or that he let his team down. He averaged 40ppg in the playoffs on his rookie contract against the Larry Bird Celtics, arguably the best team ever.
We've seen Lebron under perform in the playoffs numerous times including his first two Finals. For whatever reason, whether it was the competition or the pressure, the moment was just too big for him. MJ never even got outplayed in a single series. Anyone that thinks that isn't a HUGE factor when talking about the greatest player in history, already has their mind made up.
Jamaaliver wrote:
LBJKB24MJ23 wrote:i love Lebron i love Jordan. today I go with Jordan. tomorrow Lebron. shrugs
Himothy Duncan wrote:The guy who won during an expansion heavy period dominated by slow bigs and whose main perimeter competition were Reggie Miller and Jeff Hornack.