Doctor MJ wrote:As you see in my other post though, I too, expect to see a more dominant performance from the Heat if I'm going to anoint LeBron. If I come away from it all feeling like the Heat are simply too vulnerable to a team with a superstar big, then all this optimization they've achieved will feel like a gimmick.
You have to keep in mind that even as they moved to their small ball offense, the Heat were always in the market for a big but have been limited because of cap room; they've either looked to sign players to put in the middle or drafted bigs that don't pan out (like Dexter Pittman). It was what led to their Birdman acquisition, and even then Birdman isn't the traditional big. They would definitely be ecstatic if they can get something of Oden against the Pacers.
But anyway, this to me seems starkly similar to the "rings" argument. Even while the Heat was struggling against the Pacers, for example, I did not watch that series and doubt that LeBron was one of the best basketball players that I've ever seen (not most valuable, best.) They stayed in the series - and won the series - despite getting zilch on offense from Bosh and Wade, and with Battier/Allen in a shooting slump. A lot of things have to occur for a team to be dominant. That's just my take.
I think that MJ has the GOAT peak though, and still has ownership of that peak even as James dominates the league. If James can maintain this level for more seasons however then I'd move him to #1.