SeniorWalker wrote:LeBron has had far more control over his destiny than virtually any other player considered near the top. For example, him winning 3 titles with 3 different franchises; I think this accomplishment is impressive but needs a bit of context. Not to take away from what a great athlete LeBron is, but its not as if he was traded to 3 different teams and had to build with what he was given, enduring to lead 3 different franchises...which would give proper context because then he would be working under the same front office conditions as every other great player has since before 2010. Instead, LeBron essentially hacked the system and for most of the last 10 years has ensured that he's had either the best or second best roster in the NBA, by working around FOs and calling his friends and associates. Then when his teammates got old or underperformed, he bolted for the next best situation. And then at times forced other franchises to deliver the goods he needed. This stuff matters a great deal to me, especially if I'm going to consider your longevity. If only because, over a long and fantastic 17 year career, I have to consider the cirucmstances in how you were able to maintain that level of relevance for so long compared to other players. Does anyone really believe that a guy like, for example, Hakeem Olajuwon, if he were able to go over the heads of rival FOs and attract, say, a prime Barkley plus a third star, that he wouldn't have been a much more consistently successful player throughout his prime? What if an aging Olajuwon had dinner with young Shaq and made him force his way out of Orlando in 1996 so they could stack a few title runs together? Its not the least bit difficult to imagine.
This is what causes me to hesitate with LeBron because although he is perhaps the most naturally gifted player I've ever seen, he's also had enormous advantages created by himself and his team to heavily influence this era.
Nobody seems to be picking him for 3 titles on 3 franchises.
Any accounting that LeBron has had the best or second best roster in the NBA has to (a) overvalue star power, (b) ignore injuries, trades and (c) include James himself without acknowledging that he himself is the one driving it to be a good roster.
(a) Yes, stars. Yes eventually Battier and Allen and Andersen (though late career versions), maybe, maybe Miller when healthy. But Chalmers, Haslem, Cole, Anthony, Jones. Lewis, Bibby these guys amassed serious playoff minutes ... were they above replacement level. Bar Chalmers, my instinct is no. We can do this in each location. Smith, Shumpert,(old) Korver, Delly (who was too good and expensive for his team to keep), Mozgov, Jefferson, Hill (a legit talent, albeit not at his best), Green, Jones again. Thompson was a solid big, I won't say where is he now because he's changed in that time but he's not some exceptional piece.
(b) The Wade of the '13 and '14 playoffs looks average by box composites and worse by on-off type stuff. In Cleveland '18 finals with only Love as a star (and I do think Love has taken an unfair hit over the years), '15 finals with Kyrie and Love both missing significant chunks ...
(c) LeBron caused the goodness. With LeBron off the floor these teams went to ... pieces.
Does he have more talented casts than non-contending year but still prime Olajuwon, yes otoh. Does that matter in a comp versus Jordan, Russell and Jabbar. Not really. Does he have the optimal cast for a superstar versus Jordan or Russell. My inclination is no.
Oh and (d) framing. LeBron left money on the table (quite a lot over his career given how increases are based old salary and LeBron gave up money early) to join a good team and try to win. If you're a good GM this is great news, if you let Carlos Boozer walk because you think you've got an under the table deal with him, spend your free agent money on Larry Hughes, draft DeJuan Wagner and Luke Jackson in surrounding years ... if you think your priority for your big 3 is locking up Joel Anthony and rewarding Udonis Haslem's service ... if you aren't willing to spend to keep the champs together (not saying you "should" match on Delly, the Cavs weren't a good enough team to expect them to win again and it's bad value ... but when you've got a GoAT candidate and you can't replace the player ... you signal your ambition) and you trade your superstar for pennies on the dollar with the main piece back being damaged goods ... and you live in an era where teams literally can't offer you all the cap or 25 years ... do you expect to keep someone who isn't driven only by money. Do you ding a player for seeking a winning situation? I can't see it.