SinceGatlingWasARookie wrote:Here I quibble over the details. Just talking about Bird's rookie year prior to the arrival of Parish and McHale, Birds team was not was not all that talented. The Celtics won 29 games the year before Bird arrived and won 61 games in Bird's rookie year. What changed?
Tiny Archibald playing 11 more games and 10 more minutes per game didn't hurt. Bird's presence was obviously huge, of course. But yes, Maxwell was easily better than anyone with whom Lebron played in Cleveland.
1980 Nate was a 14/8, 115 ORTG player and was at least as good as Mo Williams ever was.
It may not be true that "Bird had more help as a rookie than Lebron ever did in Cleveland"
I think it's pretty clear that it is. Lebron never had a second option as strong as Maxwell at any point in his Cleveland career, let alone a 2-3 punch to his #1 like Nate the Skate and Maxwell together.
Then in 81, his second season, they won three rounds to win the NBA title. By that point, they'd added the ~ 19/10 Parish and rookie McHale, at which point it would be entirely false to claim that any Cleveland team with Lebron ever fielded that much talent, since Maxwell and Nate were still there. It only improved from there for Bird as they eventually acquired Ainge and DJ. He played with WAY more talent than Lebron's Cavs days, so it's hardly a surprise that there is a radical difference in team success.
Again though, even as a rookie, Bird had more to work with than even 09 and 10 Lebron, and the depth on offense makes that pretty clear. In Lebron's best years in Cleveland, he was working with Mo Williams, Big Z (65 games) and Delonte West (64 G). That doesn't at all compare. Anderson Varejao was useful as well, but more on D than on O. The year after, they added injured Shaq and waste-of-skin Jamison, as well as Anthony Parker. The team was riddled with injuries and Antawn Jamison crapped himself from 3 all year long, but especially in the playoffs. Shaq wasn't able to find any serious traction in the league post-Phoenix and while the Cavs were titans in the EC regular season, they ran into Boston and everything fell apart. Williams was weak sauce, Shaq couldn't play more than 25 minutes or so, Parker wasn't a legit second option (and by that point was fairly old), etc, etc.
Boston was definitely much more balanced. You can draw at least some sort of argument that, when healthy, the 2010 Cavs squad compared to the 1980 Boston team in terms of theoretical depth, but in practice, the results were very different... especially taking a more polished player in 23 year-old Bird versus 19 year-old Lebron and seeing who had greater impact.
The point I was making, though, is that using team success doesn't make sense. It is blindingly apparent after their rookie years, of course, irrefutably the case that Bird had more to work with, but even in that rookie season (and factoring out the age difference), it really doesn't make a lot of sense to compare team success directly during those stretches.
Say what you will ultimately about who ranks higher or is better, etc, etc, but team success is intimately related to roster and Lebron's Cavs rosters were strong defensively and mostly unimpressive offensively and in terms of actual talent.
Mo Williams was a one-time All-Star who made it in as an injury replacement. Big Z was a two-time All-Star... 2003 and 2005. By those later years, he was a low-minutes guy who couldn't be a big-time impact player. Shaq was a year away from retirement. Jamison had fallen completely apart. Parker had played a full career in Europe, then three years with Toronto before hitting Cleveland at 34 and overlapping with Lebron for a year (just like Shaq and Jamison... the latter of whom played 25 RS games and then the playoffs, and sucked).
And Mike Brown wasn't really a stellar offensive coach, though he worked the defensive system well enough.
Cleveland management didn't do a particularly good job, while Boston was able to exploit Nate's return to health and the quality of Cedric Maxwell right away. Would I say rookie Bird was better than rookie Lebron?
For sure, though given the nearly half-decade difference in age and the college difference, I can't say that is terribly surprising or meaningful.
This is the stuff I'm talking about, a direct comparison in terms of team success really falls apart along several seams.