OdomFan wrote:DimesandKnicks wrote:michaelm wrote:michaelm wrote:I believe he is saying you can’t have it both ways with which I agree. You contend Jordan was advantaged by the Bulls having a number 5 draft pick in Pippen who they could put next to Jordan, but LeBron pushed to trade a number 1 pick and could obviously have had the Cavs draft any other player in the draft that year. You also contend/complain that player in Love wasn’t as good next to LeBron as Grant was next to Jordan. You pay your money and you take your choice.
Again, I don't know why you're comparing 30 year old Lebron to 24 year old Jordan. My contention is that Jordan's organization gave him players that developed by his third by his fourth year in the league. By year four the Cav's gave Lebron Hughes and Drew Gooden and was playing in the NBA finals. And by Jordan's fourth year in the league he was coming at Krauses neck (he was in his ass) for not fielding a competitive roster and went on record with alot of his comments.
The whole, Jordan LET the Bulls rebuild around hims is just revisionist history. He's given us every indication that he likely would have skipped town or demanded a trade if the Bulls didn't get him help in seven years. He clearly demanded help. Year two the Bulls tried to shut him down to get a higher draft pick but Jordan wanted to compete for a playoff spot. I think the Bulls only lost one more game than the Cavs who ended up with the first pick. Jordan was outraged at the idea of not winning now.
Jordan was also said to be in favor of trading Grant for Buck Williams who was a more established star and was really disrespectful to Grant (which probably influenced Grant turning snitch to help inform the Jordan Rules book.)
The Last Dance showed how Jordan was irritated with Krause obsession with Kukoc, partly because he was focusing too much energy in the future instead of the right now.
In 91 he flamed Krause for not signing a 35 year old Walter Davis and was quoted as saying if he were GM they'd be a better team (hindsight) and tried to pressure the Bulls owner to fire him.
Obviously LeBron’s teams don’t win the 4 titles without him. You haven’t and can’t present any evidence that the Bulls would have won those titles without Jordan either though, or that Pippen or Grant would have been as good next to LeBron as they were next to Jordan for that matter.
We have evidence that when you pair Lebron with a top 75 player that team wins a championship. There's no doubt in my mind that Lebron would have won a championship in Cleveland with Pippen and Grant but that's just my opinion. But I'd be willing to bet that Lebron wins his first year against the Warriors if he has Pippen and Grant, as he took the Warriors to six games with five games without Irving and Love and TT and Mosgov being his most competent comrades.I disagree with Stockton that LeBron’s titles are less worthy, but also with insinuations that the titles won by the Jordan Bulls, the only 6 titles ever won by the Bulls, should be downgraded because of ‘advantages’.
There is no insinuation. But NBA fans have a hard on for looking down on Lebron for empowering himself instead of waiting for an organiztaion to do its job. The cleary message is Lebron's championship are less valuable because he needed help and got it. Again, if his orgz did it is that fine? Every other top ten player and all time great started off their NBA careers with other great players to compete with:
Kareem got Oscar in year two
Magic got Kareem in year one and Worthy and Riley in year two I believe
Bird started off with I believ Nate Archibold and got Mchale and Parish before his fourth year if I'm not mistaken
Duncan got Robinson in year one and Manu, Parker and Pop for the rest of his career
Wilt had Paul Arizin and skipped town to LA and won with Jerry West
West had Elgin Baylor until he got Wilt
Russel had Red and Cousy
Hakeem started is career with Sampson
Kobe got Shaq
Shaq got Penny in year two
Lebron had nothing and when he did he bolted to joint two career losers who'd never made it to the playoffs, but yall are calling him leaving MIA for Cleveland "stacking the deck" as if it was viewed as such at the time. People were shocked.
Every single player that entered the league and was expected to be great got help early in their career but Lebron, and when he did get enough help to win a championship, he left to start over to play player and Co-Gm, but adversity. Cowardonly in yall heads.
And why on earth should Jordan have kept going after the age of 35 in 1998 after the second of 2 threepeats which included a season which was and still is the best season any team has ever had ?. Should he have been concerned that some future player 22 years later might generate individual statistics by playing past the age of 35 without that player contending for titles himself ?.
Lebron left to play for the Cav's having played just about, or if not exactly the amount of seasons that Jordan did. If he can play 7 years with trash and win two championships than Jordan can stick around a few more years to entertain a rebuild, but coward. As if he didn't decide to play in Washington a few years later. When the Bul's decided we're going to unstack the deck for you Michael, Micchael said peace to the thought of adverisity...even just the idea of firing his coach.
You can see with clear eyes why a veteran player wouldn't want to retool to win a championship in Jordan's sake but not in Lebron's sake. Even though that's exactly what Lebron did in LA after winning three championships. And Lebron won his last championship two freaking years ago...at 38. When Jordan was 38 he was shooting sub 45 percent from the field and making no All NBA teams despite mising four seasons of wear and tear.
Lebron was sixth in MVP voting and his been ALl NBA for 18 years straight
wow. so much here that I disagree with.
You went on about the not so good parts about what Jordan had to say about Grant back then, that may all be so, but when it came down to it. like you said. They got pass all of that enough to be able to remain civil as a part of the core and it took nothing away from the success the team on to accomplished with Mike at the helm leading. Mike didn't need to be those guys buddy. His job was to make sure they were bringing it, and he did that. He had some doubts. If you ask me its understandable considering who he was playing with from 1984-87. He was dealing with a lot of drunks/drug users, etc so yeah. it took a long time for him to shake all that off and be able to trust some teammates in the NBA. Coach Doug Collins help for the 2 years that he coaches their walked MJs progress in the right direction so that Phil Jacksons approach later on could run it even further ahead to reach those championships. Once all that came into I'm sure there was never any doubt again from Mike about Horaces contributions.
Now on to the second part. You said Lebron had nothing in Cleveland. I disagree. Larry Hughes was a rising star caliber player that showed potential next to Allen Iverson in Philly, and did well with Arenas and Jamison as a core in both Golden State and later on when the 3 of them reunited together on the Washington Wizards. Im from DC so I witnessed it and thought they were a fun team. The Cavs didn't put a super team around Lebron back then, but he had pieces. Mo Williams was already a good point guard with the Bucks, Delonte West was a good 2 way guard, Big Z was good the moment he came in in 1996. I can go on and on. They had guys even after Boozer left for Utah. The real problem with Lebron is the way the team was being ran having everything go thorugh what Lebron wants to do with the ball. They had no strong willed coach ever with a actual system the way the Spurs had Pops, Bulls had the Triangle coached by Phil and Tex, etc. People say this and that team is so stacked but reality is the reason those teams were so great wasn't because they had this and that top level player, but because the system that they played in brought the best out of them. Thats how Parker and Ginobli went from 2nd round or late first round picks in their draft to developing into star players along side Tim Duncan.
Nobody could develop next to Lebron so he jumped around and basically rented stars time to try to win rings off of next to them, then when it didnt pan off after a while anymore, he jumped else where. You said Kyrie and Love wasn't a big 3? I disagree. Kyrie was a rising star with a ton of potential. Already in commercials. Kevin Love may not have been able to lead the Wolves far but individually he was still one of the top players in the NBA. With one of the best outside shots by a big. So it was a very big deal for Cleveland to get him over there with Kyrie and Lebron.
If you don't feel like reading this, just know that Odomfan listed Larry Hughes as legitimate help that LeBron had in his first stint with Cleveland.
Larry Hughes.
Let that sink in.