acrossthecourt wrote:If we're going to use that silly "win a title without another star" argument, like that's the best way to evaluate teams, and it isn't, then we're going to have to add 2013 LeBron.
His two best players:
-Wade had a sub-50 TS% and was so bad he actually became a liability and the other teams began hiding bad defenders on him (Lowe pointed this out.)
-Bosh averaged 12/7 and had problems guarding Hibbert. That does not look like superstar help to me.
The Heat's second best player was almost Chris Andersen, but he only played 15 minutes a game.
So yes, I submit that LeBron belongs in this group of one-man title teams. And just remember how he lifted those Cleveland teams:
http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/lebr ... ah-better/
LeBron didn't go to 4 straight finals at Cleveland or win a championship before joining those stars in Miami and posted similar or better individual numbers at Cleveland with better records.
Cleveland:
04-05: 42 wins (no playoff berth) *side-note: the no hand-check rule begins, to help perimeter player impact
05-06: 50 wins (2nd round loss)
06-07: 50 wins (loss in finals)
07-08: 45 wins (2nd round loss)
08-09: 66 wins (loss in ECF)
09-10: 61 wins (2nd round loss)
http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/CLE/One finals appearance loss with teams of role players built strictly around LeBron to emphasize his play.
Now what happens when he finally gets additional star talent (however you like to define it) and arguably better coaching in Miami?
LeBron in Miami w/ Wade & Bosh
10-11: 58-24 (finals loss)
11-12: 46-20 (Championship) *side-note: Lockout year for the team record, played only 66 games.
12-13: 66-16 (Championship)
13-14: 54-28 (finals loss)
Now despite LeBron having role players built around him and similar or better regular season records in certain years, he never had the full team success until had added stars and arguably better coaching in Miami. Why? The answer is obvious, he added more talent in stars like Wade and Bosh. To deny this is spin imo.
Like the 94 Rockets, Cleveland had better records some years but in Miami he added stars and won the championship despite lesser regular season records. So looking at team record and saying one is automatically better than the other is silly imo.
Of course Miami became more efficient. They had three stars so you couldn't double team all of those players, all those players made each other better. But to point to that and not look at how thier FGA and other stats took a hit with LeBron is not putting everything in context imo.
Bosh:
Bosh at age 26 took a sharp hit on his rebounds, usage, Per, less FGA, points, less assists and just about all advanced percentages. After an adjustment period he became more efficient. Did Bosh get worse overnight at age 26 in his prime or did he take a lesser role with LeBron reducing his statistics on average?
Pointing to one match-up with a true center in Hibbert, while Bosh is more finesse PF and had his rebounds and points decreased on average isn't a strong argument to say LeBron didn't have star support imo. Bosh's true ceiling of play was still higher.
Wade:
Wade also takes a hit in just about every major statistical category with LeBron the year before and after LeBron, although he did decline with age, he was healthy in that year and played 76 games. But his team based advanced stats like Win Shares goes up. Again why? Because Win Shares are team based stats and added talent helps inflate or deflate them by getting more team wins around the star player.
Someone could use circular logic and say Wade provides less team support. When actually he's taken on a lesser role and his stats have been reduced on average to provide greater usage to thier best player, LeBron James. Again, however he did experience a decline with age but still provided star support during James' four finals runs in a reduced role from age 29-32 while James was age 26-29.
When he joined the heat the volume usage of those stars decreased to adjust for the better player taking up more of that volume.
However, I really hate RealGM's obsession with title winners without any all-stars. It's to basketball evaluation as stick figures are to classical art. We all know that you can win with deep, balanced teams. From the '77 Blazers to the Pistons (of both eras) back to the late 90's Blazers, you don't need a bunch of stars crammed onto a roster. It's about the whole.
Here's the best example: the '94 Rockets were a lot better than the '95 Rockets despite ADDING a star. Shouldn't that prove how silly it is to revere players for winning on "limited" teams?
Hakeem's defensive prime was ending at age 32 in 1994. That decline in defensive prime affected the 95 Rockets regular season record, as well as Mad Max getting suspended ten games for going into the stands to fight with a fan and Drexler getting traded to the team midseason. The team had to adjust to a losing Thorpe, Max's behaviour and adding Drexler on the fly. This of course affected the regular season record.
Mad Max:
Behavioral incidents
1995: In a game at Portland on February 6, he ran into the stands to punch a fan, later claiming the fan had heckled him for reasons undisclosed. The NBA suspended him for 10 games and fined him $20,000.[5]
1995: Feigning a hamstring injury, he was given a leave of absence after the 1st game of the playoffs. Maxwell later admitted he was frustrated with not playing; the incident was hyped as Maxwell being disgruntled at the team's recent acquisition of Hall-of-Fame guard Clyde Drexler. His actions led to the Rockets ending his tenure with them.[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernon_MaxwellUsing that RS record and saying there were better without accounting for those things creates a picture without context imo.
[spoiler]We shouldn’t be flummoxed at the success of a team without a superstar (or one in his prime at least.) Stars don’t make the team; the players do.
Ten years ago, a star-studded Lakers team — not too far from three straight titles — led by a Hall of Fame coach and two of the best players in the game aided by two aging stars who were Hall of Fame locks met an upstart from Detroit
Including Karl Malone, and they have three of the top six scorers in NBA history by total career points. With Gary Payton they had four guys with 20,000 career points
Detroit dispatched them unceremoniously in five games. It didn’t matter that Kobe and Shaq were better than anyone on the Pistons. Detroit’s starting five was, as a whole, simply better.
Detroit had a HOF coach in Larry Brown who is on the short greatest coach ever list after the top 4, this is team support. As well as Ben Wallace, Chauncey Billups, Rasheed Wallace, Rip Hamilton and even Prince getting all star selections or Defensive selections after that year. It's not just about PPG, star defensive contributions count as team support as well.
Also your listing Payton and Malone's career numbers when they were ages 35 and 40 with that Laker team.
Thorpe had one selection for his career years before and Cassell was a rookie and got one all star berth for his career ten years later, neither had defensive selections. None of the 94 Rockets reached that ceiling of play compared to the Pistons.
The NBA has seen this before.
For years, actually, people assumed alpha scorers held teams back from titles. The 1970′s were a run of well-balanced teams taking championships, like the Halvicek-Cowens Boston Celtics or Washington Bullets, who won a title with a Finals MVP under ten points a game, and the 1980′s were dominated by two deep teams with stars who were amazing passers in Magic and Bird. There was a 20-year span in which the league’s leading scorer won a title — from Kareem in 1971 to Jordan in 1991.
One of the most famous championship runs was Portland in 1977.
There’s no universal law that you need a superstar to be the best team in the league. Never mind how difficult it can be to determine the best players, all that matters is that your team outscores the opposing team.
Boston's All star selections those years mentioned:
http://www.basketball-reference.com/tea ... _star.htmlPortland's:
http://www.basketball-reference.com/tea ... _star.htmlPortland had HOF coach Dr. Jack Ramsay:
John Travilla "Jack" Ramsay (February 21, 1925 – April 28, 2014) was an American basketball coach, commonly known as "Dr. Jack" (as he held an earned doctorate, see below). He was best known for coaching the Portland Trail Blazers to the 1977 NBA Title, and for his broadcasting work with the Indiana Pacers, the Miami Heat, and for ESPN TV and ESPN Radio. Ramsay was among the most respected coaches in NBA history[2] and a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_RamsayThere’s no real star power here, but it would be a top-tier defense with some scoring punch off the bench. You don’t need an MVP-level player to reach 60 wins if you fill in the rest of the team with quality players.
Losing to San Antonio is not be a black mark on LeBron’s legacy. It’s a a loss to a team who won more games and had a larger point differential.
There are rumors and extended discussions on Carmelo Anthony joining the Heat, as if LeBron can’t get it done without multiple stars. But that’s not the problem. It’s how you fill in the rest of the team. After losing Mike Miller and watching players succumb to Father Time, their supporting players are lacking. LeBron needs help, but not superstar help.
There are other ways to win.
You don't need two +6 players if you have a bunch of +2 or 0 (average) players surrounding your superstar. It's simple math.
LeBron had a 66 win team with role-players built around him, 8.68 SRS and HCA and lost in the playoffs to Dwight Howard's Magic team who won less games, had lower SRS differential and no HCA.
08-09 Magic All star selections:
http://www.basketball-reference.com/tea ... _star.html08-09 Cleveland Selections:

Both players had the team role players built around them, but Dwight's team had three playing at all star levels that particular year and a better coach in Stan Van Gundy imo. Again, team support imo.
Role players make a difference or course and there are exceptions, but the majority of championships are won by teams with stars, who have role players or some times HOF coaches helping them.
I do and it's why Garnett has always been one of my favorite players.
It's quite amazing how bad Minnesota was as a franchise. It took a lot to keep such a great player down. They lost first round picks so they could pay Joe Smith. What a well-run machine.
So the team support argument works for Garnett (who also never won without joining 2 all stars, 3 if you include Rondo and a potential HOF coach in Rivers) but not Hakeem?