Lalouie wrote:Tottery wrote:There is some truth to it, but the Cavs front office was not great at the time. Sure, he could have just stayed and hoped something would happen, but it wasn't a guarantee. I don't blame him for going to Miami.
The article mentions Jordan sticking it out with the same team without asking for a trade or asking for help, but he didn't have to. Pippen and Grant came along. Then Rodman. It wasn't guaranteed that would happen for James in Cleveland during the first stint.
so james went out of his way to guarantee it....that's stockton's whole point
Then his point is wrong.
There was nothing guaranteed about any of LeBron's championships in Miami and Cleveland. Each of them required LeBron to play on a level that wasn't much different from his first stint in Cleveland.
2012: He had to put up a historic performance to save Miami from elimination and averaged 30 PPG in the finals against OKC.
2013: He had to score 16 points in the fourth quarter of game 6 to get Miami back in the game after they entered the quarter down double digits, and then needed to be dominant in game 7 to seal the deal.
2016: He had to give back to back 40 point game performances and a triple double in game 7, all while leading both teams in every major statistical category.
If LeBron were riding the cocktails of someone else to get these championships, that would be one thing. But that simply isn't how it all played out. Yeah, LeBron thought it'd be easy. Reality painted a different picture. We've had people here claiming guys like Jokic deserve more respect even though he actually did in fact have it easy. LeBron, apart from 2020, was simply not that fortunate.