HurdyGurdyMan wrote:Homer38 wrote:HurdyGurdyMan wrote:
This is simply not true for the pre-Durant Warriors. The team was built via draft (and without super-high picks). 
Also I don't get why the argument for the Warriors being stacked is not made for the Heat, who even staged a freaking ceremony to publicly showcase how stacked they were and how much they would dominate the league.
Curry had much more room for error in 2015 and 2016 than LBJ have had in his career
 
so was he on a stacked team or not? I can't argue against two opposite arguments at once. 
also - again - LeBron would've had all the margin by joining the Knicks or the Clippers and not Wade and Bosh - it works both ways.
 
Yes Curry was on a stacked team. Especially once Durant arrived.
HurdyGurdyMan wrote:Pg81 wrote:What do you mean allowed? Curry had one of the most stacked teams of all time. Ridiculous thread. LeBron > Curry by a huge margin.
This is simply not true for the pre-Durant Warriors. The team was built via draft (and without super-high picks). 
Also I don't get why the argument for the Warriors being stacked is not made for the Heat, who even staged a freaking ceremony to publicly showcase how stacked they were and how much they would dominate the league.
 
The Heat were top heavy with a terrible bench and weak at the other two starting positions. Was it a super team? Sure. As great as some of the old legends? No. Pretty sure Magic forcing him to the Lakers for example, something he never gets flack for, turned them into a more talented team than anything LeBron ever had. 
So what if the stacking happened through the draft? So in a hypothetical case where Bird, Magic and MJ were drafted on the same team, that team would not have been stacked because it happened through the draft? Are you serious?  

If you're asking me who the Mavs best player is, I'd say Luka. A guy like Delon Wright probably rivals his impact though at this stage in his career. KP may as well if he gets his **** together.
GeorgeMarcus, 17/11/2019