cs hauser wrote:LeBron James, 8 points in 48 minutes at Game #4 of the NBA Finals. And that's after Jason friggin' Terry called him out in the media.
Question: Has Jordan ever performed that badly in the NBA Finals? Has Kobe?

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cs hauser wrote:LeBron James, 8 points in 48 minutes at Game #4 of the NBA Finals. And that's after Jason friggin' Terry called him out in the media.
Question: Has Jordan ever performed that badly in the NBA Finals? Has Kobe?
Tyrone Messby wrote:Not 1..Not 2...Not 3...Not 4...Not 5...Not 6...Not 7!!!
Ball Boy wrote:LeBron honestly looked like he just didnt care.
He played exactly like he did agaisnt Boston last year.
LuckedO wrote:Rerisen wrote:Why do people keep calling LeBron a "shell", he just had a bad game.
When me and toodles say shell, we are talking about his body. Of course, he's still a good player. Top 5 in the league. But body-wise, like I've told you numerous time already, he's lost 25% of his ability. There's a reason why he's strictly a jump shooter out there. Why is this so difficult for people to understand? All I keep hearing is he's "settling" and "refuses to attack the basket". What do these people think, that LeBron just woke up one day and decided, "OK, I will just take jump shots this season after being the game's best finisher EVER the past 5 years". That's not what happened. LeBron shoots jumpers because he CANNOT drive.
vergogna wrote:- game starts at 3.50
- nice passing at 4.15
- BARGS REBOUND at 4.47
- BARGS REBOUND (almost) at 6.23
Rerisen wrote:The Heat have less 3 point shooting than the Cavs, and thus worse spacing. Wade and LeBron don't get great respect beyond the arc, which is logical from opposing defenses, so teams sag fast against them. This is another reason for LeBron shooting more jumpers this year and having less success getting to the paint.
Miami was 11th in 3 pointers made this year and 7th in percentage. The Cavs were 8th and 2nd in those categories last year and 3rd and 2nd the year before.
toodles23 wrote:Then how do you explain him getting to the rim just fine in '05, '06 and '07?
Since the beginning of his career, we’ve compared Lebron James to the greats. He has the dominant scoring ability of Michael Jordan. He has the combination of size and passing of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. But I believe the best comparison may end up being Wilt Chamberlain.
Both Lebron and Wilt are among the athletic greatest talents any sport has seen. They are men among boys physically. On top of this they possess superior basketball IQ and skill. Both players are larger than life stars.
What makes judging Wilt’s career so frustrating is a comparative lack of domination compared to other greats. The Big Dipper ended up with 2 titles, one in ’67 with Philadelphia and one in ’72 with the LA Lakers. His contemporary Bill Russell won 11 titles in 13 years. Most noteably Russell came out on top in ‘68 and ‘69 when his team had aged and Wilt seemingly had the superior talent beside him. First with Hal Greer, Billy Cunningham, Chet Walker, Luke Jackson and Wali Jones in Philadelphia, and then with Jerry West and Elgin Baylor in LA. Yet Russell’s Celtics were a better team who won with defense, effort and supporting each other’s games. Wilt can be excused for not winning titles the first half of his career with less help than Russell, but in 68 and 69 he has no excuse. The truth is these two seasons take Wilt out of the greatest of all time discussions. If a greatest ever candidate, he wins in those seasons. Period.
One could blame lack of depth or coaching for the Lakers ‘69 failure, and one could point the finger at teammates disappearing in ‘68. But I’ve always felt Wilt lacked the championship character of stars like Russell, Jordan, Bird and Magic. That desire to win and competitiveness. That commitment to their team winning. Wilt was as much about Wilt as the team. He notoriously loved his statistical accomplishments and his lavish off court lifestyle. His teammates in Philadelphia were great players playing with Wilt. His teammates in LA were superstars playing with Wilt. The Sixers and Lakers were great stars playing together, rather than simply a great team.
Lebron’s career path screams Wilt Chamberlain. 0 titles in the first half of his career can be attributed to a lack of help. But now he has Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, giving him more supporting talent than any star. Yet the Heat are lacking something. Sure, their record is near the top of the league at 43-19, a 57 W pace. But a 2-10 record against other top 7 teams shows vulnerability and fragility. This week highlighted this, the Heat blowing a 24 pt lead against Orlando and then getting drubbed by 30 against the Spurs. There is a line in the sand between the Heat and the Celtics, Bulls and Spurs who are great teams with one goal in mind. Whereas the Heat are great stars on the same court. The Spurs rely on each other’s games supporting one another. The Heat rely on each other’s game fitting on the same court.
Can this be attributed to Lebron? As the team’s biggest presence the team takes after him. It is undeniable he does not have the Michael Jordan, Larry Bird “win or die” gene. If he did the lackluster effort in Game 5 against the Celtics last year wouldn’t have happened. If he did reports of Eric Spoelestra scolding him for not playing seriously wouldn’t have happened. If he did I suspect the Heat would be playing with a competitive fire enough to crush the league. Winning a title is not all that matters to Lebron. Winning wasn’t all that mattered for Wilt either. Teams take after their best player and the Heat are no exception.
So much of the game is mental. A team who’s slightly more focused, slightly more intense, a team with players slightly more committed to taking a statistical backseat for the good of the team – will find themselves more succesful. When I watch this year’s Chicago Bulls play I see a team commitment to a championship run. I wish the Heat played like them.
Lebron is set to go down as one of the game’s all time players no matter what he does. As with Wilt, his stats and MVPs will give him defenders even with a comparative lack of team success. But the difference between Lebron and a player like Jordan may come down to the former lacking that singular championship desire. As a result Lebron’s most apt nickname may end up being the Little Dipper. Which at least for me is a mixed compliment.
#1 pick wrote:MJ wasn't more skilled than Lebron. Quite the opposite to be honest.
Rerisen wrote:The Heat have less 3 point shooting than the Cavs, and thus worse spacing.
Miami was 11th in 3 pointers made this year and 7th in percentage. The Cavs were 8th and 2nd in those categories last year and 3rd and 2nd the year before.
Rerisen wrote:The Heat have less 3 point shooting than the Cavs, and thus worse spacing. Wade and LeBron don't get great respect beyond the arc, which is logical from opposing defenses, so teams sag fast against them. This is another reason for LeBron shooting more jumpers this year and having less success getting to the paint.
Miami was 11th in 3 pointers made this year and 7th in percentage. The Cavs were 8th and 2nd in those categories last year and 3rd and 2nd the year before.
Dr Mufasa wrote:Thinking back to something I wrote in March... "The Little Dipper": http://asubstituteforwar.com/2011/03/06 ... le-dipper/
JordansBulls wrote:cs hauser wrote:LeBron James, 8 points in 48 minutes at Game #4 of the NBA Finals. And that's after Jason friggin' Terry called him out in the media.
Question: Has Jordan ever performed that badly in the NBA Finals? Has Kobe?
Jordan's lowest in a finals game was 22 points. His lowest series in the finals was 27.3 ppg.