LeBron James and Paul George
when guarding each other
Eastern Conference finals
James George*
Points 45 29
FG 18-31 10-13
Turnovers 8 1
Points per play 1.07 1.71
* George: 6-for-7, 16 points, zero TO in Game 2
Thoughts on this?
Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier
LeBron James and Paul George
when guarding each other
Eastern Conference finals
James George*
Points 45 29
FG 18-31 10-13
Turnovers 8 1
Points per play 1.07 1.71
* George: 6-for-7, 16 points, zero TO in Game 2
Mutnt wrote:An Unbiased Fan wrote:Lebron's issue is the same as it was back in his Cleveland days, he tends to become too ball-dominant in big series. Against a good defensive team, this is a huge problem because it under-utilizes his teammates. You simply don't want 1 guy scoring your points, grabbing the boards, and making all the assists, because it fragments the other players and turns them into props.
3 years, in and Lebron/Bosh still don't have a solid 2 man game. There's no reason for there not to be a Kobe/Pau, or even Deron/Boozer type chemistry, especially considering Lebron's playmaking, and Bosh's skillset. I have asked this before, but what bigman has really thrived next to Lebron, and can Lebron have the type of PS success people expect if his bigs are constantly under-utilized?
You got it backwards, as usual. If there's any problem is that he dominates the ball LESS than optimal for the best, most versatile player in the league. In cases like last night, he simply needs to channel his inner Michael Jordan and go berserk. He was hot at the end of the 3rd and beginning of the 4th and then had a 6 minute stretch where he was again just swinging the ball around or watching Wade's pitiful attempts at creating something... Besides, his usage rate in these playoffs is 29%, hardly 'ball-dominant'. Compare that with Melo's 38% this year or your boy Bean who frequently had around 33% after he established himself as the alpha boy on his team. Those guys all dominate the ball FAR more than LeBron, yet you don't seem to have any problem with that...
Otherwise, I agree. One player offenses are predictable and not good at all, it's just that Miami isn't that and you comparing them to the Cavs is laughable. Miami has a less-LeBron-dependent offense than Cleveland did. That's why they are a better team, but alas, there will be quite a few games (especially against tough defenses like Indiana) where Wade & Bosh will be completely neutralized and the other role players will miss their shots. It happened in the last two games more or less. In those cases, LeBron needs to take over the game (mostly with his scoring), otherwise Miami will simply lose the game, they're lucky they haven't lost both games with home court. Go ahead, watch the last two games again and tell me that LeBron isn't involved in at least 80% of good things that Miami do. I dare you. Even the shots that Miami misses, LeBron is the guy who created that missed wide opener 75% of the time.
Thrive? Birdman isn't 'thriving' in your opinion? Dude went from a jobless Big man that nobody wanted to having a PER of 32.2 shooting 85%FG from the floor in the playoffs... Watch the tape, everything is because of LeBron James' drives.
As far as the James/Bosh connection goes (or lack thereof). I always felt a PnR game with those two would be absolutely deadly, since James is one of the best penetrators and passers in the league and Bosh is a great roll and pop option but Spo would obviously rather rely on 'space&wait' offense which, ironically, is similar to what the Cavs used to run. It's funny because in the 3 years the Big Three have been together, I've seen like a gazillion plays ran by Spoelstra but 80% of those plays just vanish at one point. I guess they can't run more than a couple of plays over a certain interval. I.e. LeBron has feasted in the post last year in the playoffs, this year, he rarely plays with his back to the basket down low. They mix a lot of things with Wade, James, Bosh but the only thing that always seems to be the same is the shooters will get shots, it's just a matter of hitting them.
Jordan23Forever wrote:SideshowBob wrote:
I think this was the best performance I've seen out of him in a Miami uniform outside of game 6 vs. Boston up until the two TOs
You have on some really rose-colored glasses, there. He was basically invisible and passive the majority of the 4th quarter. In the final 8:00, in a close game, he had one basket. If the best you've seen from the best player in the league is a disappearing act over the final 8:00 of an important, close playoff game, then he's not that good. I noticed his passivity the majority of the 4th quarter. It was glaring. Maybe he lost his balls at the end of the 3rd when Paul George drove right around him and dunked on the entire city of Miami.
Sorry, but the love fest in here is a bit much. Great players shouldn't get passes for disappearing acts.
PCProductions wrote:Jordan23Forever wrote:SideshowBob wrote:
I think this was the best performance I've seen out of him in a Miami uniform outside of game 6 vs. Boston up until the two TOs
You have on some really rose-colored glasses, there. He was basically invisible and passive the majority of the 4th quarter. In the final 8:00, in a close game, he had one basket. If the best you've seen from the best player in the league is a disappearing act over the final 8:00 of an important, close playoff game, then he's not that good. I noticed his passivity the majority of the 4th quarter. It was glaring. Maybe he lost his balls at the end of the 3rd when Paul George drove right around him and dunked on the entire city of Miami.
Sorry, but the love fest in here is a bit much. Great players shouldn't get passes for disappearing acts.
This guy.
GSP wrote:http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/58642/george-hibbert-get-the-better-of-lebron-jamesLeBron James and Paul George
when guarding each other
Eastern Conference finals
James George*
Points 45 29
FG 18-31 10-13
Turnovers 8 1
Points per play 1.07 1.71
* George: 6-for-7, 16 points, zero TO in Game 2
Thoughts on this?
Jordan23Forever wrote: I noticed his passivity the majority of the 4th quarter. It was glaring. Maybe he lost his balls at the end of the 3rd when Paul George drove right around him and dunked on the entire city of Miami.
Jordan23Forever wrote:PCProductions wrote:Jordan23Forever wrote:
You have on some really rose-colored glasses, there. He was basically invisible and passive the majority of the 4th quarter. In the final 8:00, in a close game, he had one basket. If the best you've seen from the best player in the league is a disappearing act over the final 8:00 of an important, close playoff game, then he's not that good. I noticed his passivity the majority of the 4th quarter. It was glaring. Maybe he lost his balls at the end of the 3rd when Paul George drove right around him and dunked on the entire city of Miami.
Sorry, but the love fest in here is a bit much. Great players shouldn't get passes for disappearing acts.
This guy.
Nice response. The facts remain: one basket over the final 8:00 of a close playoff game, the majority of that time just being passive swinging the ball, and two crucial TO's late in the game. Deal with the facts.
Exodus wrote:I think Kyrie Irving in the best player on the team to be honest
TheChosen618 wrote:Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.
Jordan23Forever wrote:Nice response. The facts remain: one basket over the final 8:00 of a close playoff game, the majority of that time just being passive swinging the ball, and two crucial TO's late in the game. Deal with the facts.
TheChosen618 wrote:GSP wrote:http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/58642/george-hibbert-get-the-better-of-lebron-jamesLeBron James and Paul George
when guarding each other
Eastern Conference finals
James George*
Points 45 29
FG 18-31 10-13
Turnovers 8 1
Points per play 1.07 1.71
* George: 6-for-7, 16 points, zero TO in Game 2
Thoughts on this?
I think they should stick him with the bigs and PFs more often like Hansbrough and West. He is doing a much better job on those two than Battier is.
Lebron's defense has regressed this season as I have been saying all season primarily his man defense. He has still been terrific helping defensively and making key defensive plays like that block on Hibbert last night.
It's a tough situation for the Heat and Lebron right now. Do you stick him with bigs so the Pacers can't dominate the boards as much with the price of Lebron being fatigue and not being able to take over as much offensively? It's hard to say because the Heat are nothing offensively without Lebron either and are practically useless without him.
Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.


An Unbiased Fan wrote:TheChosen618 wrote:Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.
Dude, the difference between Lebron and MJ, is that MJ knew how to utilize guys like Pippen, so he didn't have to dominate everything. Lebron has a 20/10 caliber big on his roster.... perhaps he needs to actually use him.
Doctor MJ wrote:I don't understand why people jump in a thread and say basically, "This thing you're all talking about. I'm too ignorant to know anything about it. Lollerskates!"
An Unbiased Fan wrote:Nobody has dominated the ball more than Lebron in the modern era, except maybe Prime Nash. This isn't about USG%, it's about how all of Lebron's teams are focused around utilizing HIM, and not the other 4 guys on the court. This leads to huge box scores, but like I always ask, what's the overall impact? Lebron controls the ball way too much, and turns his cast into props. This limits the impact of his teammates, which is why we always hear "he doesn't have enough help"...even when paired with Wade/Bosh.
I don't think you quite get it. The fact that Lebron is involved in so much of Miami's offense.....is what is causing the under-utilization of his supporting cast. Guys become one-dimensional next to him, and his teams live and die with his performances.
My question has always been whether stars can maintain effectiveness playing next to Lebron. He's an unselfish player, sure. But his play seems to demand others to strip parts of their game out for the most part. Wade had to sacrifice some of his game to allow Lebron to be Lebron. Bosh has regressed quite a bit from his Toronto days, for Lebron to be Lebron.
If Birdman's 11 game playoff run in 14 mpg is your best example, then......
It begs the question of Lebron playing next to a quality bigman, that's for sure. I don't think Lebron likes the 2man game, and would rather take the big out of the paint to have more room to get to the rim.
It's just kinda crazy to see Hibbert and West having their way with the Heat, and Bosh just standing out there waiting to shoot a 12-15 jumper. Bosh was a 24/11 player before he went to Miami. He was the kind of guy defenses had to account for, which isn't the case now in Miami where he's just a spot up big.
An Unbiased Fan wrote:TheChosen618 wrote:Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.
Dude, the difference between Lebron and MJ, is that MJ knew how to utilize guys like Pippen, so he didn't have to dominate everything. Lebron has a 20/10 caliber big on his roster.... perhaps he needs to actually use him.
An Unbiased Fan wrote:TheChosen618 wrote:Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.
Dude, the difference between Lebron and MJ, is that MJ knew how to utilize guys like Pippen, so he didn't have to dominate everything. Lebron has a 20/10 caliber big on his roster.... perhaps he needs to actually use him.
NO-KG-AI wrote:An Unbiased Fan wrote:TheChosen618 wrote:Lebron has to dominate on both ends now, something Jordan never even had to carry.
Dude, the difference between Lebron and MJ, is that MJ knew how to utilize guys like Pippen, so he didn't have to dominate everything. Lebron has a 20/10 caliber big on his roster.... perhaps he needs to actually use him.
I always thought Bosh should be used more, but Bosh really has become super passive since then. He won't drive like he used to, even when he has the ball, and he's doing nothing on the glass, and that's not something that's on LeBron. Bosh should be attacking the glass.
PCProductions wrote:Jordan23Forever wrote:Nice response. The facts remain: one basket over the final 8:00 of a close playoff game, the majority of that time just being passive swinging the ball, and two crucial TO's late in the game. Deal with the facts.
Lebron's 4th quarter wasn't spectacular, but the rest of his game was. You can blame the game on him if you want, but either way Miami just got outplayed defensively. The point is that you only ever come into this thread to rip on Lebron, and it's getting kinda old. After this game, I anticipated some of these Lebron criticisms, and you guys didn't fail to deliver.
colts18 wrote:You mean the 4th quarter where LeBron went 4-5, 10 points, 4 rebounds, 1 big block, and a jumpball win? Do you mean the same 4th quarter where LeBron's supporting cast went 3-13 FG (1-6 3P)? Do you mean the 4th quarter where LeBron's teammates went 0-6 FG in the last 5:40 minutes of the game
You keep mentioning LeBron's ball dominance, but why should LeBron change his game for Bosh? LeBron's on court offensive rating is the highest non-Phoenix Suns O rating since 1997. The team has a 116.5 O rating and .596 TS% with LeBron on the court. In the playoffs the Heat have a 114 O rating which is the best in the playoffs among players with 250+ MP. Why should he stop being ball dominant when ball dominant has proven to work? You haven't shown any evidence that LeBron handling the ball less will be a good thing.An Unbiased Fan wrote:Just think of Bosh back in his Toronto days. That's they way he should be used, and Lebron has to start accommodating his game around his cast, and not just the other way around. I don't understand how a guy with his passing ability, doesn't have a great 2-man game with Bosh, who is very skilled.
Mutnt wrote:An Unbiased Fan wrote:Nobody has dominated the ball more than Lebron in the modern era, except maybe Prime Nash. This isn't about USG%, it's about how all of Lebron's teams are focused around utilizing HIM, and not the other 4 guys on the court. This leads to huge box scores, but like I always ask, what's the overall impact? Lebron controls the ball way too much, and turns his cast into props. This limits the impact of his teammates, which is why we always hear "he doesn't have enough help"...even when paired with Wade/Bosh.