kayess wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:however rationally I'm under no illusions given that I've seen LeBron for so many years: This isn't the "true" LeBron while all others are false, and this isn't the "new" LeBron that's figured out how to make everything perfect with these Cavs. It's real, but so is the other stuff, and there will absolutely be important games in the future where LeBron has the same issues again.
On finding the "real" LeBron: Idk if thinking of it as probabilistic helps - If you weigh the expected contribution of LeBron based on the probability "real"/"old" LeBron shows up against tough competition (the best, IIRC, as per ElGee - and his elimination / game 7 numbers and level of play speak for themselves) and the tier below tough competition (either one gets you the win 95%+ of the time)
The issue is that LeBron didn't kick into this mode simply because of the stakes. We've seen in the past that LeBron isn't someone who is capable of flipping that switch in the same way as Jordan or Shaq. He gets in his own head a lot more, which is why some of his worst moment have come with his back to the wall.
If I weight odds, then the odds of LeBron going nuts like he's done here simply based on it being the finals, etc, the odds are very low and absolutely not worth overwhelming the entire season leading up to that.
But, however he got here, LeBron appears to be here now, and that may well be what gives Cleveland its first championship since rock & roll was for teenagers, and that should be a really big deal.
Of course as I say all this, we all have to wait and see what happens in Game 7.
It's not like Kerr to make a major adjustment in Game 7, at least from what we've seen, but as I like to say: There's nothing hard about stopping LeBron or anyone else from scoring, you just have to commit enough man power to it and be okay with other openings. Right now Cleveland is winning largely as a 2-man show in a way that frankly Westbrook/Durant came nothing close to, and they're doing it with a 3rd offensive star who can't seem to get used by the offense. To me they seem like exactly the type of team you'd try to "make someone else beat us".
Granted as I say all this, now that Cleveland has its groove going, the passing & movement looks excellent, which will make it much harder to stop. This is why it's so critical to keep a team from grooving, as any opponent of the Golden State Warriors will tell you. The good news is though that even when Cleveland's team offense looks great, that doesn't mean it looks great in the half-court. If they can minimize fast break opportunities, and go hard on LeBron & Kyrie in the half court, to me the game is quite winnable for them.