Stalwart wrote:Well the thing you're not acknowledging is role Jordan played in their development. The only reason they were able to maintain that level of play without Jordan was because of the years they spent playing with him. Jordan truly is the best floor raiser as he legitimately makes his teammates better basketball players and not just win he's on the court with them. The Bulls players all attest to that till this day.
Why was Jordan such a garbage developer of talent before Pippen and Grant? Why did Pippen and Grant only develop around the same time you'd have expected them to anyways? If you argued "Jordan put them in an optimal position to succeed by making sure they didn't take more shots than they could handle and letting them focus on rebounding and defense" I'd agree - and I'd point out that even with that optimal situation it took some time for them to develop . . . just like players normally do. This gets dangerously close to saying that Jordan's Team Success = Jordan's Individual Success which is a reach of epic proportions.
Stalwart wrote:But in the case of Jordan vs Lebron its not a relevant question as they both had sufficient, championship level rosters around them for the bulk of their careers. In the case of Lebron he's an unusually high level of talent around him. So why can't we just look at team success between the two? Why can't we just see who was able to best utilize the talent around them and win?
How do you know they had the same level of support? After all, Jordan had the exact same roster in '91 as '90, the same in '92 as in '89 (by names anyways). And yet, as far as we can tell anything from stats, Jordan did not get particularly better in '91 and '92 as compared to '89 and '90. So how did the Bulls turn from a borderline contender for the East into a trophy-hoisting juggernaut? The easiest answer is that the supporting cast was better in '91 and '92 than it was in '89 and '90. Consider the non-Jordan VORP of those four teams:
1989: 1.2
1990: 2.8
1991: 9.1
1992: 13.0
By looking at data I was able to determine that Jordan's supporting cast was far worse before '91. But all the players' names were the same!
You know, why not check the combined VORP of all of their championship proximate teammates? That should be good clean fun that will absolutely not be disregarded as subjective!
In ascending order (regular season numbers, adjusted for season length):
1.2: Jordan in 1989 has a garbage supporting cast, finishes well short of a ring
2.8: In 1990 Jordan has a slightly less garbage supporting cast, gets knocked out in Conference Finals. In 2018 LeBron has a comparable supporting cast and gets to the Finals (weak conference though).
3.6: In 2019 LeBron has a fairly garbage supporting cast *and* has one of his worst seasons ever. Missed playoffs.
6.7: In 2017 LeBron has a decent (but not great) supporting cast and leads them to the Finals.
7.3: In 1993 Jordan has a decent (but not great) supporting cast and carries them to a championship - one of the best carry-jobs ever. In 2010 LeBron has a loosely comparable cast and falls to the 2010 Celtics.
7.6: In 2014 LeBron has a decent (but not great) supporting cast and gets them to the Finals where they lose to the '14 Spurs. In 2021 LeBron had a theoretically decent supporting cast, but without AD healthy it ended in an early round loss.
7.7: In 2012 LeBron had what should have been a very good supporting cast that had Wade at 70% for much of the year, he carries the Heat to a championship.
9.1: In 1991 Jordan suddenly has a very good supporting cast and leads the Bulls to their first title. In 2009 LeBron has what VORP thinks was a very good supporting cast (don't ask me how that team had 9.1 VORP between them) and comes up short in the playoffs, despite putting up arguably the best individual postseason ever. In 2016 LeBron has a very good supporting cast and leads his team to a narrow upset of one of the best teams ever, winning a championship.
10.0: In 2020 LeBron has a fairly excellent supporting cast and leads his team to a championship. Bubble year.
10.2: In 2015 LeBron has a fairly excellent supporting cast. He leads them to the Finals but they lose both their 2nd and 3rd best player, falling to the Warriors.
10.9: In 2011 LeBron has a fairly excellent supporting cast. He comes up short in the Finals (no good excuse).
11.0: In 2013 LeBron has a fairly excellent supporting cast and leads his team to a championship over the Spurs.
12.0: In 1998 Jordan has a borderline outstanding supporting cast and leads his team to a championship.
13.0: In 1992 Jordan has a damned good supporting cast and leads his team to a championship.
14.4: In 1997 Jordan has an outstanding supporting cast and leads his team to a championship.
15.0: In 1996 Jordan has one of the best supporting casts ever and leads his team to a championship.
Are there any lessons here?
With the understanding that this is all approximate, for four of Jordan's championships he had supporting casts that were (by VORP) considerably better than anything LeBron ever had.
LeBron had seasons tanked by injuries in 2021 and 2015, something Jordan never had to deal with.
LeBron also faced the 2013 & 2014 Spurs, along with the 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 Warriors, all of which were probably better teams than anyone Jordan had to face. That doesn't eliminate Jordan's victories (or wipe out LeBron's losses) but it does provide some context for years where LeBron fell short.
LeBron unquestionably has the worst season in question (2019) and the worst black mark (2011).
Does this answer a GOAT debate at all? Not really. But it does suggest that most of Jordan's supporting casts were significantly better than any LeBron had.
I realize that the above method isn't as
objective as simply going by name recognition. Then again, don't forget that the 1990 and 1991 Bulls had
by name almost identical rosters. Perhaps names aren't everything.