fatal9 wrote:It probably doesn't hurt the Heat to make an issue about it, but the obsession with FG% is kind of annoying to me. Most of the greatest offensive superstars to ever play are good enough where they can control their FG% with the kind of shots they take (especially against bad teams). The point isn't to play in a way to maximize your own FG%, it's to get your team the best shot given the clock situation and how the defense is positioned, and sometimes that means star players have to take shots that they might only make 40% of the time. There's a reason all that historic shooting stuff disappears in the playoffs, even for LeBron.
That's all well and good, but the numbers suggest LeBron IS getting his team the best shot available, the team's offensive efficiency correlates to his own on just about a 1:1 ratio. I don't think its a coincidence.
This is why I think these criticisms come off as a bit petty/silly/nitpickish, they aren't supported empirically at all, yet it should be a relatively simple thing to prove based on the numbers if the suggestion that he was limiting the team's production were actually true.
I'll say it again, its like calling Jordan a ballhog because he shot the ball a bit more than LeBron does back during his prime. And I'm sure we would have a thread, and someone would have to be that guy, the one who just has to tell you Jordan is shooting too much... and he'd warn us, "sure its working now but at some point he's going to freeze out his teammates and they're going to be in trouble", basically all the arguments about LeBron now but in reverse.
At this point, the arguments are no longer about what LeBron does wrong, its about why he hasn't hit the imaginary ceiling people have come up with in their heads. And somehow that thing gets higher every year, even though (probably because) he keeps getting better.