michaelm wrote:To be fair unless LeBron deliberately tanked a season they weren’t going to get many if any top 10 draft picks, he is fairly definitely the GOAT floor raiser.
Top 10 draft picks are not the only way to build a contender around a generational talent. Hell, the Cavs
had a number 10 pick the year after they drafted LeBron and they took Luke Jackson over Al Jefferson, Josh Smith, J.R. Smith, and Jameer Nelson.
This has been discussed before on here, but the problem is that people around LeBron and LeBron himself forced Cavs to go all in when LeBron was 22. That's ludicrous. 22-year-olds don't lead teams to NBA titles even if their name is LeBron. You're just not going to beat experienced, balanced, well-built teams at that age. Maybe you get lucky and win a series or two just based on your youth and talent, but you need to win 16 games to be an NBA champion.
The Cavs traded away so many first and second round picks and traded away anything resembling young talent for corpses of players like Ben Wallace, Wally Szczerbiak, Shaq, Antawn Jamison. There was never a plan beyond "right now," as if James was 35 at the time and not barely 25 by the time he left.
The Cavs needed to both come up with a long-term plan, wait for talent to develop, or wait for good trades or free agency to work out. They also needed to wait for LeBron to mature and for some of the strong teams around that time to either age out or break up. That's the NBA and that's the reality for every star player. You need planning, you need some luck, and you need patience. The Cavs and LeBron acted that same way the Lakers and LeBron have been acting the past few years except LeBron was 15(!) years younger. It was never going to work out.