Kyrie For Three wrote:I doubt that many truly want to play with Lebron anymore. I tried to tell people this when some were clucking at the idea of Lebron/Boston. He is just far too controlling and everything that is around him now has to do with his pathetic "GOAT" legacy. You can't even watch a damn Lebron game without them mentioning his all time stats and MJ every 4 minutes or putting charts on the screen.
I appreciate LBJ's accomplishments. He has had an historic 10-year run. If he stays healthy and within 70% of current production for another 5 years he will own the NBA record books.
I am beginning to see what so many others pointed out in the LeBron to Boston thread. His grip on a franchise is stifling. His presence dictates a certain style of offense. It reminds me of that line in Bull Durham when Crash says " Don't try to strike everybody out. Strikeouts are boring! Besides that, they're fascist. Throw some ground balls - it's more democratic." In LeBron's universe, he determines who gets fed. Now that he is still a great player, but closer to the pack than 2 or 3 years ago, I can see the next generation wanting to "Be the man" instead of revolving around LBJ's sun.