Nivek wrote:"Lebron can't shoot" is much too strong a statement.
You have a point...but a couple things:
1) He shot significantly better from 10-15 ft and 16-23 ft than he has in the past. Improved shot? Fluke? More open shots because of spacing created by Wade/Bosh? Weaker defender because teams' best perimeter defender took Wade?? Not sure exactly what this means.
2) I'm hardly a Kobe fan. Kobe clearly has the better midrange game, but his percentages certainly drop further out. The defense's goal with Kobe is to keep him out and make him shoot longer, contested 2s. If Kobe was playing off-ball alongside someone like Paul or Wade, he would be hurting his team if he didn't shoot significantly better from three. I'm not sure how he would respond to that role, but he certainly has the stroke for it. (But regardless, the Lakers defensive big rotation has been the real key to their titles--a critical piece missing from the Wade-LeBron-Bosh union.)
3) LeBron was in the mid to high 40s in eFG% for each range from 3-9 ft all the way out to three pointers. That is good. But I'm not sure it's good enough. A steady diet of 45% without a very, very high rate of offensive rebounds is simply not good enough when you need to be scoring well over a point per possession.
A great offense like the 2009-2010 Suns had six guys shooting at least 59% eFG% from three. Think about the off-ball spacing contrast between that threat from deep and what LeBron gives you when Wade and Bosh run a pick-and-roll. When you have Nash and Amare shooting 71% and 67% at rim and knocking down free throws, while 60% eFG% three point shooters spot up around the perimeter, it's indefensible.
When LeBron's threat as a stretch option is under 50%, it's pretty easy for a solid defensive team with time to prepare in the playoffs (Dallas...) to figure out that they have to prevent Wade from getting to the rim at all costs, even if they leave LeBron wide open in the process. LeBron will hit some of those shots, but he'll also just catch it and hold it because he is so accustomed to creating himself, and because he really wants to get to the rim.
Now, Miami scored 112.72 per 100 possessions when LeBron was on the court during the regular season. That's very good. But their top two units only scored 102.65 and 102.86 against Dallas (Dallas' top two units scored 130.51 and 118.07 in the playoffs). Dallas figured something out. Part of it was simply that Dallas has a great defensive team. Another part of it was probably that Dallas' efficient offense prevented Miami's transition game.
But part of it is that Miami's half-court offense can be tamed.


















