Okay, it's been almost 4 years. It might be a pipe dream, but I want to have an intelligent discussion on LeBron James in the 2011 Finals. I know I'm opening myself up to all kinds of issues, but if you're the type of person who's going to do that stuff please stay out of this thread. Further, if you are a regular here please ignore any baiting and just talk about basketball. And finally, please read the entire OP before you respond, so that we're all on the same page for this discussion.
And please, please please keep the discussion focused on what happened basketball wise, I'm not interested in discussing "choking" or any other narrative.
With that out of the way, I've been watching film on the 2011 Finals for a project I'm currently working on, and as a side task I've been collecting data on James' performance in these Finals. I think Miami had severe systemic issues in 2011, many of which had nothing to do with James, and I want to share some things I've been picking up. I want to make clear that he's not blameless, and certainly played very poorly by his standards, BUT I want to have a discourse on this, because it's always the elephant in the room in this discussion and I want to know where this board stands on the issues.
So, a few things I want to discuss:
1. What issues are directly related to LeBron? (I'm talking basketball things, not mental things)
2. What issues are directly related to Erik Spoelstra/team strategy?
3. What issues are a direct function of team construction and were not fixable? (ie. the decision to go to small ball may have changed their entire course of history in 2012)
(Right now, all notes and observations are from Game 2)
The first thing I want to say is LeBron straight away looks active and disruptive on defense. He's honestly kind of a force, and his ability to force turnovers was the direct catalyst for Miami's run to take a big lead in the 4th quarter. He did a very good job checking Marion, got caught sleeping at times but he was trying hard not to foul and his offensive responsibilities were pretty huge. And his defense on Terry was actually pretty reminiscent of the famous Rose series, totally shut him off in the possessions I kept track of. But the turnovers are a big deal, because it's the one fourth quarter Miami looked good in this series and it's directly because LeBron was wreaking havoc in the passing lanes and Wade was taking off sprinting down the floor when it happened. As soon as that dried up and Dallas got less careless, the Hat couldn't score in the half court and Dallas mounted their comeback.
So defensively the Mavericks tried some bizarre strategies in this series that totally flabbergasted all the Heat players. Their weird full-court pressure thing literally caused Jeff Van Gundy to ask "What is Terry doing??" to which Breen and Jackson laughed and said nothing. It was strange. Dallas would have their guards run hard at Miami's point guard, force James to bring the ball up, and then drop back into coverage. Look at this:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVfHycN4tRw&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]
This is one of those things that was just crazy enough to work. It's clear from the jump that Miami's gameplan was to work LeBron off the ball and get him and Wade post touches galore. Wade still got into the post whenever he wanted, but the Mavs literally forced James to bring the ball up every possession he was on the floor and it totally disrupted Miami's sets. You could actually see them changing play calls and miscommunicating.
Here's an even more egregious example, where Kidd won't even let Bibby touch the ball:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8oQO5JAr1gE&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]
By the time James gets it up court, there are 18 seconds on the shot clock and the ball is on the wrong side of the floor. Look where Bosh and a teammate are standing on the left block; they were setting a screen for someone to come around to the right half of the floor, and now that play is completely dead. I don't know what Carlisle was seeing on film that caused him to pull this strategy, but holy *** was it a stroke of genius. Miami made not adjustment to counter, and it continued to bother them all throughout the game. Sometimes I wonder if Miami even practiced in 2011.
Now more conventionally, Dallas became singularly fixated on preventing James from catching the ball where he wants. Marion was tremendous at this, using his strength to bump LeBron farther and farther from the basket until he would be in post up position almost near the 3 point line. Dallas also had a habit of swarming James pretty much anywhere inside the arc without regard for anyone else:
And sometimes even outside the arc:
Part of this is Miami's lack of creativity, but also part is Dallas being smart about switching and rotating, and sending decoys to stop penetration. Dallas had a wonderful ability to force James to go all the way out to half court to catch the ball:
Now we all know the fundamental issues with Miami's roster; namely that it was unbalanced and top heavy. But it seems like nobody told Spoelstra the value of shooting because he often insisted on lineups with Haslem/Anthony even with the James/Wade pairing. Spot figured this out later in his career but this actually killed Miami during this series. Watch Dallas basically not bother to cover anyone one a Lebron iso and force him into a tough shot:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kX0BLNfd_ck&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]
This is exactly the type of play they killed the league with from 2012 on but in 2011 they didn't have anywhere near enough shooting to actually scare people.
Miami also had severe problems with a general lack of creativity/motion, and the offense really stagnated as a result. I honestly believe if they had but James in better positions he would have played much better. I counted exactly on play in the entire game where Miami sent more than one screener for James and this is what happened:
Again, the only misdirection play they ran all game resulted in a wide open dunk for LeBron. Are you kidding me?
All of these issues compounded for a disastrous result come 4th quarter half-court possessions. This is one of the most brutal offensive sequences I think I've ever witnessed:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFXMw2iMgNE&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]
This play breaks all of the rules of offensive basketball. No screens, lazy movement, nobody who doesn't have the ball even moves. You have two "floor spacers" standing inside the arc. I mean, are you kidding me? How can you blame LeBron for forcing a bailout shot in this situation? Also note the hard show by terry and the awesome switch by Marion; Dallas was a really underrated defensive team.
Now I want to make clear I'm not absolving Bron for this series. He has to play better, and a lot of the ways Miami improved were directly related to James' own improvements. His passing was lazy and noncommittal in this series, nothing like the bullets that became Miami's staples in subsequent years. And he definitely lacked agrressiveness at times, whether due to Dallas' scheme or his own issues I don't know. He shot awfully, and was dreadful particularly from the line.
But all the same, there were bigger systemic issues going on hear and I don't know that LeBron deserves a fraction of the negativity he receives for this. As is clearly evident, it's not just talent that wins, you have to fit and work as a team, and Miami didn't so that. It also doesn't help that Carlisle completely undressed Spoelstra, and his wizardry gives Dallas something that nobody else really has.
Anyway, I hope to see some good discussion, and let me know what you all think.