E-Balla wrote:kayess wrote:Yes it's very weird to give credit Bron a lion's share of the credit for that. I mean tbf - Doc MJ iirc has used the inverse logic to criticize other players in the past so he's at least being consistent in his approach, which is understandable.
At the same time I think giving him no credit is also unfair - as is, fundamentally your success is a function of many people, and basketball's no different. I don't think LeBron has a Duncan like ability to rein in headcases, but it's entirely possible that just having a stronger personality and a clear pecking order was enough to send a "do not **** around, we are serious about not tolerating bull" policy loud and clear
On the MJ-Rodman comparison: IIRC thye kept around a guy who was there solely to rein in Rodman (his bff or something), so I don't think the situation's THAT comparable. He did say in the docu that he respected Mike and all that, and Mike didn't say nothing to him because he knew he would go out and compete once the game started
It's possible in the way that it's also possible LeBron took them all on a trip to the moon this offseason. Again Dwight lost 25 lbs before ever even trying out for the Lakers. Rondo is seen as the best teammate tons of guys have had outside of Ray Allen and Dallas. It's clearly not LeBron.
No, it's possible in the way that you're being an insufferable moron about this.
Doc MJ and the rest on the other end of the spectrum putting all the credit on LeBron is obviously pushing it. At the same time, if you think an individual's success is based purely, 100% on that individual's efforts then I would say you either have not experienced the real world yet, or are completely oblivious to its lessons (especially in a work setting).
Dwight being in shape hasn't been the problem with him for years, so just saying "DwIgHt LoSt 25 PoUnDs" over and over again isn't going to magically make it so. We know he's had problems playing within a team concept, demanding shots when it wasn't the best for the team, even when he was declining (see: post touches and not wanting to PNR with Nash, post touches in Houston, etc. etc.) We know leaders and strong personalities can help put guys like Dwight in line (e.g. Duncan with Stephen Jackson). Ergo, it's completely plausible the leaders on this team (Vogel included) would've had some part in this entire thing working out.
Also, though I didn't explicitly touch Rondo: ah yes, no-baggage, never called out teammates in public Rondo, never clashed publicly with his coach Rondo. That Rondo? If Rondo were 100% responsible for him performing well, I guess it was the fault of those other teammates and coaches when he completely **** sucked for some time. Lmao





















