Impuniti wrote:BombsquadSammy wrote:Impuniti wrote:He has two all stars in his team, I will go and get him the smallest violin for some sympathy.
LeBron has been fabulous all season; even his most ardent haters have to admit that; therefore, the discussion concerns the quality of the rest of the team. You can't have it both ways-- you can't observe that they're under-performing in an attempt to dismiss LeBron's contribution, then turn around and proclaim that they have two all-stars to negate the importance of said contribution.
The evidence speaks for itself; they're been under-performing this season (as you rightly observed), yet they're a 50-plus-win team leading the entire conference; LeBron is the reason for that.
You can't be an MVP player if your team underperforms though, that's kind of a huge point of being an MVP during the year I would think.
That's debatable in the sense that one player can only do so much to coax the best out of another. What if you worked all year for a promotion only to have your boss say, 'you aren't getting promoted because the guy who works next to you did a lousy job'; that wouldn't be fair.
Obviously, LBJ is the leader of the team, but that doesn't change the reality that someone can only do so much to make someone else better; otherwise, let's criticize Jordan for never turning Bill Wennington into Bill Russell.
Impuniti wrote:I agree that Bron has been great this season as well, but your job as a leader is to get the team to perform.. which they haven't.
51 wins, leading the conference = not performing?
Impuniti wrote:So he's responsible for it.
I can flip that on you; I can point out that they're the conference leader despite how poorly they've performed in the second half of the season. If you say LBJ is responsible for them underperforming, I say he's responsible for them being in such a great position despite how badly they've struggled. Where does that leave us? Back to the ageless question of what an MVP actually is.
Impuniti wrote:This seems like the only season where NBA fans are making a lot of changes on what's expected out the MVP.
Eh... this debate rages every season; it's just more pointed this year because the front-runners in the race are so tightly-arrayed in the home-stretch.
And for what it's worth, LBJ isn't my MVP (Harden is); I just take issue with your original assertion that he doesn't belong in the conversation. That team would be a wreck if he weren't there, so even if he's not the most valuable guy this year, it's silly to pretend like he isn't in the thick of the discussion.