Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron?

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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#441 » by lessthanjake » Sun Jun 9, 2024 8:32 pm

therealbig3 wrote:The 09 and 10 Cavs were title favorites because of LeBron.


Yes, and the team that’s the title favorite every year is the title favorite in large part because of their best player. The fact remains that the dominant perception at the time was that the supporting cast around LeBron was absolutely good enough to win with, and indeed that it was good enough for the Cavs to be favorites to a degree that the league doesn’t even have at all in like half of years. Them failing to win the title in those two years was a huge title favorite failing, not the failure of some team that had a mega-star but clearly wasn’t good enough.

And he did not play poorly in 09, idk how anyone could come up with that narrative.


Did you read what I said? I’ll quote what I said for you again:

“One of those years it was in spite of LeBron playing well (he played well against Orlando, but Orlando ended up being a tough matchup for them defensively), and one of those years it was primarily caused by LeBron playing abysmally in the last three games of the series in completely inexplicable fashion (so inexplicable that people constructed conspiracy theories regarding his mother’s sex life to try to explain it).”

So yeah, you’re straw manning.

Those were extremely flawed teams with limited talent outside of LeBron that got exposed come playoff time. We see teams like that go down all the time, regardless of their RS record. Don’t need to revise history by acting like those were secretly great teams that LeBron just screwed up with.


We rarely see teams go down when they are that level of title favorite and have an all-time great in his peak years. And when we do, it is always the case that that team at least wins the title in a nearby year. The 2009 and 2010 Cavs are literally the *only* exception to that ever.

And you can say they had “limited talent outside of LeBron,” but that simply wasn’t the perception at the time. It’s a post-hoc rationale. If that were what people thought before the Cavs lost (i.e. before losers’ bias and peoples’ desire to make excuses comes in), there’s no way they would’ve been such huge title favorites. The Cavs weren’t such huge title favorites in earlier years. Nor, in fact, were the vast majority of the teams LeBron later had (only the 2013 Heat had better pre-playoff title odds than the 2009 and 2010 Cavs), so this cannot simply be explained by the effect LeBron himself has on odds. The bottom line is that people absolutely thought that those supporting casts were good enough to win the title—and, in fact, thought that they were good enough to be huge favorites. The narrative that they weren’t good enough was a post-hoc rationale after they lost and LeBron left.

Why was the perception of those teams so good, even though they didn’t have a major star alongside LeBron? Well, they were crafted really well around LeBron: the team had a defensively slanted roster that was constructed to nevertheless fit optimally well with LeBron offensively by surrounding LeBron with shooters. The result was that they played great defense while also giving LeBron the floor spacing he needed to flourish with his heliocentric offensive style (this is relative to the era, of course—obviously court spacing these days is a different animal). The pieces were clearly there for them to be a great team and potentially win the title. It was only after they didn’t win the title that the narrative formed that LeBron didn’t have enough “help” because he didn’t have another major star. Prior to that, people understood that that was a really well-constructed roster around LeBron that had every opportunity to win a title. They didn’t do it, and LeBron left for a situation that he thought would be even easier. And, initially, he failed spectacularly even then, but to his credit he did eventually put it together and stop failing. But it’s that period where peak LeBron was failing with teams that were widely considered more than good enough to win the title that leads a lot of people to have him clearly below Jordan.

2011 is really the only time LeBron just straight up failed and clearly underachieved. Want to say that never happened with Jordan, fine, but we have many, many other years when LeBron delivered and met expectations or overachieved, often times in a spectacular way. He also wasn’t the same guy in 2011 that he was in 2009 or 2010. He was physically different and not in a good way. There also seems to be this narrative of him only figuring out how to be clutch in 2012, when he was the clutchest player in the league in Cleveland.


I agree that the narrative that LeBron wasn’t “clutch” in his first stint in Cleveland was wrong. That was really just people wanting to find something to criticize him for—and criticizing someone who has never won a title as not being “clutch” is low-hanging fruit, even when it’s not *really* true. Overall, LeBron played very well in clutch situations in those years. However, he did also have times where he came in well below expectations with those teams. The 2010 playoffs was a very good example—where he played awfully in the last half the series against the Celtics. It wasn’t as bad as the 2011 Finals, because it wasn’t the whole series, but it was still quite bad. The angle people try to take now is to just say we should ignore it because those Cavs weren’t good enough to win anyways, but that’s just completely divorced from what people thought at the time, and really should just be understood as a post-hoc excuse. The 2007 Finals is another example where LeBron came in well below expectations. There, I do think that it’s true that the Cavs weren’t good enough to win anyways, so it’s not as much of a black mark, but LeBron did play badly in those Finals even considering the difficult and perhaps futile circumstances.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#442 » by Vampirate » Sun Jun 9, 2024 8:58 pm

MJ had 6 titles in 8 years, let that sink in.

I don't blame Lebron for every finals loss, especially going up against the KD/Curry Warriors, but the loss against the Mavs sunk his GOAT bid.

But really, for a player to truly dethrone MJ as the GOAT you'd need something like a 4-5 peat as the unquestioned best player on the team and also be the consensus best player in the league at that time.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#443 » by IG2 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:04 pm

lessthanjake wrote:
This seems obviously very overly simplistic. The supporting cast changed quite a lot over the years, such that the team around Malone and Stockton in those years really wasn’t the same at all as it was in that 1986-1994 timeframe you refer to.


The only notable change was acquiring Jeff Hornacek in 1994 and losing an equivalent player in Jeff Malone in 1995. Hornacek was a little better offensively while Jeff was much better defensively. That doesn't explain the jump from being a perennial 50-55 win team for a decade to suddenly winning 60+ games while your best players are all on the wrong side of 30.

Malone was very clearly abnormal (especially relative to his era) in how well he took care of his body, such that it is obviously no coincidence that he was great at a late age


My point wasn't Malone maintaining elite play into his mid 30's was a referendum on the league's weakness. Many greats players have managed to be very good around that age after all. But they weren't winning MVPs. That's my point. If a mid-30's guy is winning multiple MVPs and his name isn't MJ, LeBron or Kareem, then it's just a weak ass league at the top. 1997-1999 were the dog days of the NBA. League only had 1 in-prime/young superstar in Shaq and the other 2 big names (MJ & Malone) were geezers holding on. Little surprise Utah finally managed to breakthrough and make the Finals. Weak competition.

Also, as someone who was also a Chicago resident at the time, I definitely thought the Bulls were going to lose the series late in Game 6 in 1998, when the Jazz were ahead by 3 with less than a minute left and Game 7 would’ve been in Utah with Pippen clearly non-functional. Of course, Jordan basically single-handledly made sure that didn’t happen.


I mean, Utah failing to win that Game 6 @ home with a useless Pippen and MJ not exactly having an efficient shooting night pretty much says it all about them. They were frauds. Malone/Stockton always had too many glaring holes in their game and they badly needed a dynamic perimeter threat to overcome that, which they never came close to acquiring.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#444 » by IG2 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:20 pm

lessthanjake wrote:One thing I think people really memory-hole (or in some cases simply aren’t old enough to realize) is that in LeBron’s last two years in his first stint with the Cavs, the Cavs were actually the title favorites going into the playoffs.


Come on. Everybody already knows this and LeBron got plenty of **** back then for not winning, even though he was stellar in 2009 and subpar against Boston in 2010. People don't hold those 2 seasons against him much anymore because those rosters, despite their regular season success, simply weren't built for deep playoff success given the lack of a proper #2. When Mo Williams is your 2nd best player, you are not winning ****. So those seasons are now mostly remembered for LeBron's floor-raising greatness than anything. He was the sole reason why they were expected to win it all.

This is the context surrounding people criticizing LeBron for going to Miami.


Stop :lol:

The criticism LeBron received post-Decision only had to do with 2 things: 1) how he announced it and 2) joining 2 other stars

Nobody cared that he left Cleveland because everybody knew that wasn't a championship level roster. Cavs predictably became the league's worst team the following season without LeBron.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#445 » by NZB2323 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:39 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
NZB2323 wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
He faced a couple good defenders like Harper and Moncrief early in his career, but during his championship runs the defenses and defenders in particular he faced were weak, with the exception of Payton (who still gave up size). Byron Russell was not a good defender either. Neither was Drexler. lol anything to prop up Jordan.

Kawhi and Iggy are legitimately GOAT level perimeter defenders, and LeBron faced them multiple times in the playoffs. Went up against defenses literally designed to stop him, unlike the primitive crap that Jordan faced.


Iggy is not a GOAT level perimeter defender. He made 1 all-defensive 1st team.

Here are some players Jordan went up against in the playoffs:

Rodman - 2x DPOTY, 7x all-defensive 1st team

Joe Dumars - 4x all-defensive 1st team

Sidney Moncrief - 2x DPOTY, 4x all-defensive 1st team

Gary Payton - 1x DPOTY, 9x all-defensive 1st team

And then when Jordan got to the rim he often dunked over Ewing, Mutumbo, or Alonzo Mourning. And yes, some of these defenders are shorter than Jordan. Jrue Holiday and Derrick white are shorter than most guards and the Celtics defense is doing pretty well. Marcus Smart is 6’3” and won DPOTY.

And not every series did LeBron go up against a great defensive player. He’s also been guarded by Paul Pierce, Hedo Turkoglu, DeMarre Carroll, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Richard Jefferson, and Antwan Jamison.

Rodman is arguably the greatest defensive player of all time. He successfully defended and beat Magic, Jordan, Bird, Rodman, and Shaq in playoff series. And we have footage of Rodman defending Jordan in 88, 89, 90, and 91.









Difference being, Jordan facing a great defender on the perimeter was more the exception than the rule, while LeBron facing one was the opposite.


Jordan faced Joe Dumars, Dennis Rodman, and the Bad Boys Pistons 4 years in a row. LeBron faced the Demar Derozan Raptors 3 years in a row and an over the hill Paul Pierce 4 times in 5 years.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#446 » by IG2 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:48 pm

lessthanjake wrote:
The fact remains that the dominant perception at the time was that the supporting cast around LeBron was absolutely good enough to win with


The rationale behind that was basically well-they-have-the-league's-best-record-and-they-have-LeBron-so-I-guess-they-will-win. Nobody was exactly gushing about 'Mo Williams and Anthony Parker lol. If the roster was worth a damn they wouldn't have been the league's worst team the following season. And I know what you're going to say - that they were "built for LeBron" and blah blah. Except there is no such thing as a championship team that collapses without its best player. They still manage to be respectable (or in Bulls' case, win 55 games). The fact that Cleveland was literally the worst team in the league in 2011, even when they fully came into that season with the intention to win, tells you everything you need to know about them.

The 2009 and 2010 Cavs are literally the *only* exception to that ever.


Because the 2009 and 2010 Cavs are essentially GOAT-level floor raising seasons.

Well, they were crafted really well around LeBron: the team had a defensively slanted roster


What defensively slanted roster :lol: . They were starting Shaq's corpse, Jamison and 'Mo Williams at 3 of the 5 positions. LeBron was so good from 09-13 that pretty much anything around him was bound to look like a "good fit".
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#447 » by lessthanjake » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:54 pm

IG2 wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
This seems obviously very overly simplistic. The supporting cast changed quite a lot over the years, such that the team around Malone and Stockton in those years really wasn’t the same at all as it was in that 1986-1994 timeframe you refer to.


The only notable change was acquiring Jeff Hornacek in 1994 and losing an equivalent player in Jeff Malone in 1995. Hornacek was a little better offensively while Jeff was much better defensively. That doesn't explain the jump from being a perennial 50-55 win team for a decade to suddenly winning 60+ games while your best players were all on the wrong side of 30.


First of all, Hornacek was a better player and a better fit than Jeff Malone. The Jazz themselves talked about that a lot at the time. Furthermore, there’s a lot of hand waving going on with you limiting things to what you consider a “notable change.” The role players on the team changed a ton, and changes in role players can very easily explain a team going from a 50-55 win team to a 60-win team! Role players being better (or simply a better fit) matters a good deal! It’s very often what makes a team jump from being very good to great (or vice versa).

Also, as someone who was also a Chicago resident at the time, I definitely thought the Bulls were going to lose the series late in Game 6 in 1998, when the Jazz were ahead by 3 with less than a minute left and Game 7 would’ve been in Utah with Pippen clearly non-functional. Of course, Jordan basically single-handledly made sure that didn’t happen.


I mean, Utah failing to win that Game 6 @ home with a useless Pippen and MJ not exactly having an efficient shooting night pretty much says it all about them. They were frauds. Malone/Stockton had too many glaring holes in their game and they badly needed a dynamic perimeter threat to overcome that, which they never came close to acquiring.


That’s one game—and a game that required huge late-game heroics from Jordan for the Bulls to barely win (as well as the role players for the Bulls happening to make their shots). The Jazz offense actually performed great that game (112.7 ORTG against a great defense), and they simply lost because Jordan was really good (the shooting efficiency wasn’t incredible, but when you take into account him having 1 turnover with that kind of scoring volume, it was an efficient night on high volume) and shooting variance went in the Bulls’ role players’ favor that game (for instance, Dennis Rodman made a 20-footer!). I don’t see much negative to take from that regarding the Jazz, except that they couldn’t finish off Jordan in a close game (not exactly a big indictment on them!).

Overall, it’s just hard for me to see how you think the Jazz were not a great team. This isn’t a team that made the Finals but only with easy paths. Those Jazz obliterated Shaq’s Lakers twice. Yes, Kobe was still really young, but the Lakers had Eddie Jones at that point, who was a genuine all star at the time, as well as Van Exel who also made an all star game in those years, and the rest of that team included the Fisher/Horry/Fox crew that prominently featured later for the Lakers. And the Jazz destroyed them twice. They beat the Duncan/Robinson Spurs in 5 games. They twice beat Hakeem’s Rockets, who had won the title in 1994 and 1995, and had won 57 games in one of the years the Jazz beat them. Yes, Hakeem was older, but Hakeem was still all-NBA first team in that first year the Jazz beat them, and they’d added Barkley too. If we go back to 1996, the Jazz also beat the 59-win Robinson Spurs with relative ease, and only lost in 7 to a great Sonics team that they outscored in the series. The year before that, in 1995, they lost in the first round, but it was to the eventual champion Rockets, and they lost in a deciding game that they were up by 7 in with less than 6 minutes left. Even the Bulls themselves had some difficulty with the Jazz—with the 1997 Jazz being the closest average MOV that the second-three-peat Bulls had. The Jazz beat a whole bunch of really good teams—and often did so easily. And in those years there was no team that easily beat the Jazz in any series. Every team that beat the Jazz from 1995-1998 won by the skin of their teeth, and all of them were great teams (three of the four were title winners, and the other was a 64-win team). This is really just not the profile of a team that could be reasonably described as “frauds.” And I think the only way you can get there is to just decide that nothing they did means anything because every team in those years was bad. Which is basically just tautological, not to mention that it completely ignores the quality we know was possessed by the great players they faced.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#448 » by SlimShady83 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 9:56 pm

Any topic Including MJ ... It's MJ enough said :)
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#449 » by 1993Playoffs » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:01 pm

MJ better scorer,
LeBron is a better passer , rebounder, and defender, (while being close as a scorer)
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#450 » by Rust_Cohle » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:10 pm

1993Playoffs wrote:MJ better scorer,
LeBron is a better passer , rebounder, and defender, (while being close as a scorer)



Very debatable for better defender, Jordan was as good as lebron defensively and Jordan had a better assist to turnover ratio but yes lebron was the better passer but not by much
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#451 » by therealbig3 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:37 pm

Rust_Cohle wrote:
1993Playoffs wrote:MJ better scorer,
LeBron is a better passer , rebounder, and defender, (while being close as a scorer)



Very debatable for better defender, Jordan was as good as lebron defensively and Jordan had a better assist to turnover ratio but yes lebron was the better passer but not by much


LeBron was basically a defensive anchor as a wing. That's insane. Jordan was never that.

And I can't really take you seriously if you think passing is close. It's not. LeBron is closer to Magic as a passer than Jordan is to LeBron.

Jordan mythologizing continues.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#452 » by lessthanjake » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:42 pm

IG2 wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
The fact remains that the dominant perception at the time was that the supporting cast around LeBron was absolutely good enough to win with


The rationale behind that was basically well-they-have-the-league's-best-record-and-they-have-LeBron-so-I-guess-they-will-win. Nobody was exactly gushing about 'Mo Williams and Anthony Parker lol. If the roster was worth a damn they wouldn't have been the league's worst team the following season. And I know what you're going to say - that they were "built for LeBron" and blah blah. Except there is no such thing as a championship team that collapses without its best player. They still manage to be respectable (or in Bulls' case, win 55 games). The fact that Cleveland was literally the worst team in the league in 2011, even when they fully came into that season with the intention to win, tells you everything you need to know about them.


They were not even remotely the same team the next year. Like look at the 2011 Cavaliers and think about how many games were actually played by guys who were major players on the 2010 Cavaliers. Basically everyone on the 2010 Cavaliers either left or missed a huge portion of the 2011 season. Out of the guys that played the top 7 most minutes for the Cavaliers in the 2010 playoffs (i.e. the core of their playoff rotation), 3 players (including LeBron) were not there the next year, and three of the others played 31, 36, and 56 games. Anthony Parker was literally the only guy who was there and actually played a lot of games. And meanwhile, the coach was also different. So you’re just comparing to a team that was not even remotely similar.

So yeah, it is actually true that the team was built for LeBron (specifically to optimize around his heliocentric style). But it’s also the case that that’s not the most important thing when it comes to a comparison to the 2011 Cavaliers, since at a more basic level they also simply weren’t even remotely the same team.

As for saying it was just “well-they-have-the-league's-best-record-and-they-have-LeBron-so-I-guess-they-will-win,” that’s part of it of course, but this just handwaves away the fact that the performance of the supporting cast is a significant part of why they had the league’s best record in the first place. LeBron’s teams typically didn’t have the league’s best record, even when he had tons of talent around him and was still in his peak years! Saying “well they have the league’s best record and they have LeBron,” is essentially akin to saying “well they have LeBron and a good team around him.” And yeah, that *is* why they were big favorites.

The 2009 and 2010 Cavs are literally the *only* exception to that ever.


Because the 2009 and 2010 Cavs are essentially GOAT-level floor raising seasons.


LeBron himself literally never had a team do as well in the regular season as the 2009 Cavs did (tied for his best regular season record, and easily is the best SRS his teams ever got). And yet you somehow think that those Cavs were bad and only had good results because of LeBron? That’s basically just waving a magic wand at things and deciding to believe whatever you want. The reality is that teams don’t do that well without a high-performing supporting cast. And it makes no sense to selectively deny that in this case and say it was all about LeBron, when we know that LeBron hasn’t had teams do that well even when he *did* have high-performing supporting casts while still in his peak years. The simple and obvious answer here is that they were a great team, that played great defense and was built really well around LeBron.

Furthermore, this whole explanation again just isn’t consistent with contemporaneous perception of the teams. If people thought LeBron had just hard carried a team in the regular season that wasn’t actually good enough, then they wouldn’t have had pre-playoff title odds that were incredibly good. And they especially wouldn’t have had them in 2010, after people had already seen them lose in the playoffs once after a great regular season. People had a lot of confidence in them because they were a really good team that was consistently performing at a very high level!

Well, they were crafted really well around LeBron: the team had a defensively slanted roster


What defensively slanted roster :lol: . They were starting Shaq's corpse, Jamison and 'Mo Williams at 3 of the 5 positions. LeBron was so good from 09-13 that pretty much anything around him was bound to look like a "good fit".


Varejao was one of the league’s best defenders in those years. Delonte West was a defensively-slanted player. So was Anthony Parker IMO, as well as obviously Ilgauskas. And that’s not even talking about the 2009 Cavs, which had Ben Wallace. Moreover, leaving aside the actual roster itself, they had Mike Brown, who was one of the very best defensive coaches of the era. Overall, the 2009 and 2010 Cavs put up 5.9 and 3.5 relative DRTGs—which was very elite defensively, in an area of the game that is inherently dependent on the team performing well as a whole and really cannot be plausibly considered to be carried by one player (and especially one that isn’t a big man). And, indeed, it’s even more implausible that that’d be the case when we see that when LeBron went to the Heat while still in his defensive peak, his teams weren’t as good defensively overall as those 2009 and 2010 Cavs were (the 2011-2014 Heat averaged a 2.8 relative DRTG). Those Cavs supporting casts played objectively great defense. If you think that those Cavs weren’t defensively slanted, then that just reflects that despite being good enough defensively to be undeniably elite defensively, they possessed enough offensive ability (including, probably most notably shooting ability) that you don’t think they were really “slanted” towards defense. But that would support my conclusion, not yours.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#453 » by Slimjimzv » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:42 pm

Yes, there is a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron. There's also a reasonable argument that this is a fishing post.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#454 » by Rust_Cohle » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:50 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
Rust_Cohle wrote:
1993Playoffs wrote:MJ better scorer,
LeBron is a better passer , rebounder, and defender, (while being close as a scorer)



Very debatable for better defender, Jordan was as good as lebron defensively and Jordan had a better assist to turnover ratio but yes lebron was the better passer but not by much


LeBron was basically a defensive anchor as a wing. That's insane. Jordan was never that.

And I can't really take you seriously if you think passing is close. It's not. LeBron is closer to Magic as a passer than Jordan is to LeBron.

Jordan mythologizing continues.


Wrong, on top of lebron being incredibly inconsistent as a defender after 2013, Jordan’s 87-88 season trumps lebron defensively. Jordan also has more all defensive teams on top of a DPOY.

Assist averages were awfully close, and this is with lebron playing with much better scorers than Jordan. Jordan also averaged a triple double when he did have to play PG.

You don’t know what you’re talking about, hard to take you seriously about anything
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#455 » by ScrantonBulls » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:50 pm

lessthanjake wrote:
IG2 wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
The fact remains that the dominant perception at the time was that the supporting cast around LeBron was absolutely good enough to win with


The rationale behind that was basically well-they-have-the-league's-best-record-and-they-have-LeBron-so-I-guess-they-will-win. Nobody was exactly gushing about 'Mo Williams and Anthony Parker lol. If the roster was worth a damn they wouldn't have been the league's worst team the following season. And I know what you're going to say - that they were "built for LeBron" and blah blah. Except there is no such thing as a championship team that collapses without its best player. They still manage to be respectable (or in Bulls' case, win 55 games). The fact that Cleveland was literally the worst team in the league in 2011, even when they fully came into that season with the intention to win, tells you everything you need to know about them.


They were not even remotely the same team the next year. Like look at the 2011 Cavaliers and think about how many games were actually played by guys who were major players on the 2010 Cavaliers. Basically everyone on the 2010 Cavaliers either left or missed a huge portion of the 2011 season. Out of the guys that played the top 7 most minutes for the Cavaliers in the 2010 playoffs (i.e. the core of their playoff rotation), 3 players (including LeBron) were not there the next year, and three of the others played 31, 36, and 56 games. Anthony Parker was literally the only guy who was there and actually played a lot of games. And meanwhile, the coach was also different. So you’re just comparing to a team that was not even remotely similar.

So yeah, it is actually true that the team was built for LeBron (specifically to optimize around his heliocentric style). But it’s also the case that that’s not the most important thing when it comes to a comparison to the 2011 Cavaliers, since at a more basic level they also simply weren’t even remotely the same team.

As for saying it was just “well-they-have-the-league's-best-record-and-they-have-LeBron-so-I-guess-they-will-win,” that’s part of it of course, but this just handwaves away the fact that the performance of the supporting cast is a significant part of why they had the league’s best record in the first place. LeBron’s teams typically didn’t have the league’s best record, even when he had tons of talent around him and was still in his peak years! Saying “well they have the league’s best record and they have LeBron,” is essentially akin to saying “well they have LeBron and a good team around him.” And yeah, that *is* why they were big favorites.

The 2009 and 2010 Cavs are literally the *only* exception to that ever.


Because the 2009 and 2010 Cavs are essentially GOAT-level floor raising seasons.


LeBron himself literally never had a team do as well in the regular season as the 2009 Cavs did (tied for his best regular season record, and easily is the best SRS his teams ever got). And yet you somehow think that those Cavs were bad and only had good results because of LeBron? That’s basically just waving a magic wand at things and deciding to believe whatever you want. The reality is that teams don’t do that well without a high-performing supporting cast. And it makes no sense to selectively deny that in this case and say it was all about LeBron, when we know that LeBron hasn’t had teams do that well even when he *did* have high-performing supporting casts while still in his peak years. The simple and obvious answer here is that they were a great team, that played great defense and was built really well around LeBron.

Furthermore, this whole explanation again just isn’t consistent with contemporaneous perception of the teams. If people thought LeBron had just hard carried a team in the regular season that wasn’t actually good enough, then they wouldn’t have had pre-playoff title odds that were incredibly good. And they especially wouldn’t have had them in 2010, after people had already seen them lose in the playoffs once after a great regular season. People had a lot of confidence in them because they were a really good team that was consistently performing at a very high level!

Well, they were crafted really well around LeBron: the team had a defensively slanted roster


What defensively slanted roster :lol: . They were starting Shaq's corpse, Jamison and 'Mo Williams at 3 of the 5 positions. LeBron was so good from 09-13 that pretty much anything around him was bound to look like a "good fit".


Varejao was one of the league’s best defenders in those years. Delonte West was a defensively-slanted player. So was Anthony Parker IMO, as well as obviously Ilgauskas. And that’s not even talking about the 2009 Cavs, which had Ben Wallace. Moreover, leaving aside the actual roster itself, they had Mike Brown, who was one of the very best defensive coaches of the era. Overall, the 2009 and 2010 Cavs put up 5.9 and 3.5 relative DRTGs—which was very elite defensively, in an area of the game that is inherently dependent on the team performing well as a whole and really cannot be plausibly considered to be carried by one player (and especially one that isn’t a big man). And, indeed, it’s even more implausible that that’d be the case when we see that when LeBron went to the Heat while still in his defensive peak, his teams weren’t as good defensively overall as those 2009 and 2010 Cavs were (the 2011-2014 Heat averaged a 2.8 relative DRTG). Those Cavs supporting casts played objectively great defense. If you think that those Cavs weren’t defensively slanted, then that just reflects that despite being good enough defensively to be undeniably elite defensively, they possessed enough offensive ability (including, probably most notably shooting ability) that you don’t think they were really “slanted” towards defense. But that would support my conclusion, not yours.

if that 2009 Cavs team was so great outside of LeBron, why couldn't they make the finals when LeBron had the GOAT postseason? Ya know, the year he had a 37.4 PER in the playoffs.
bledredwine wrote:There were 3 times Jordan won and was considered the underdog

1989 Eastern Conference Finals against the Detroit Pistons, the 1991 NBA Finals against the Magic Johnson-led Los Angeles Lakers, and the 1995 Eastern Conference Finals against the NY Knicks
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#456 » by therealbig3 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:52 pm

NZB2323 wrote:Jordan faced Joe Dumars, Dennis Rodman, and the Bad Boys Pistons 4 years in a row. LeBron faced the Demar Derozan Raptors 3 years in a row and an over the hill Paul Pierce 4 times in 5 years.


You have clips of Rodman guarding Jordan at times, but his primary defender was Dumars. Dumars was 6'3" and gave up a ton of size and strength to Jordan. Sorry if I'm not too impressed.

Paul Pierce is a tougher man defender to go up against than Dumars to be honest with you. He's 6'6", deceptively quick, and strong as hell. Also the type of guy that is allowed to get away with a ton of contact. With KG backing him up. LOL, you're really trying to use the Celtics as an example of a team that had weak defense?

It's not really close man, the Suns were using 6'1" Kevin Johnson on Jordan for crying out loud, because the apparently all-defensive Dan Majerle moved like his feet were stuck in cement and KJ was the only one with any hope of staying in front of Jordan.

The fact that A. Majerle made All-Defense, and B. KJ was the only one that could stay in front of Jordan really tells you how freaking weak perimeter defense was at the time. EVERY team now (at least every good one) has a 6'5-6'8 wing that is strong and athletic and can actually somewhat keep up with other great athletes, even freaks like Jordan and LeBron. And Majerle would be a defensive liability. A wing that has no lateral quickness and couldn't stay in front of an opposing wing with any sort of consistency making All-Defense is wild lol.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#457 » by Slimjimzv » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:56 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
NZB2323 wrote:Jordan faced Joe Dumars, Dennis Rodman, and the Bad Boys Pistons 4 years in a row. LeBron faced the Demar Derozan Raptors 3 years in a row and an over the hill Paul Pierce 4 times in 5 years.


You have clips of Rodman guarding Jordan at times, but his primary defender was Dumars. Dumars was 6'3" and gave up a ton of size and strength to Jordan. Sorry if I'm not too impressed.

Paul Pierce is a tougher man defender to go up against than Dumars to be honest with you. He's 6'6", deceptively quick, and strong as hell. Also the type of guy that is allowed to get away with a ton of contact. With KG backing him up. LOL, you're really trying to use the Celtics as an example of a team that had weak defense?

It's not really close man, the Suns were using 6'1" Kevin Johnson on Jordan for crying out loud, because the apparently all-defensive Dan Majerle moved like his feet were stuck in cement and KJ was the only one with any hope of staying in front of Jordan.

The fact that A. Majerle made All-Defense, and B. KJ was the only one that could stay in front of Jordan really tells you how freaking weak perimeter defense was at the time. EVERY team now (at least every good one) has a 6'5-6'8 wing that is strong and athletic and can actually somewhat keep up with other great athletes, even freaks like Jordan and LeBron. And Majerle would be a defensive liability. A wing that has no lateral quickness and couldn't stay in front of an opposing wing with any sort of consistency making All-Defense is wild lol.


Two things - First, perimeter defenders were allowed to put hands on the offensive player. This allowed them to more effectively direct the offensive player where they wanted them and gave them an advantage getting steals. Second, the gameplan against Jordan wasn't to stop his drive, but to clobber him with bigs who's primary talent was beating the hell out of people. I don't think it's an accurate assessment to act like KJ or Dumars were just on an island trying to defend Jordan and him beating them meant that he wasn't going against a stingy defense.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#458 » by lessthanjake » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:57 pm

IG2 wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:One thing I think people really memory-hole (or in some cases simply aren’t old enough to realize) is that in LeBron’s last two years in his first stint with the Cavs, the Cavs were actually the title favorites going into the playoffs.


Come on. Everybody already knows this and LeBron got plenty of **** back then for not winning, even though he was stellar in 2009 and subpar against Boston in 2010. People don't hold those 2 seasons against him much anymore because those rosters, despite their regular season success, simply weren't built for deep playoff success given the lack of a proper #2. When Mo Williams is your 2nd best player, you are not winning ****. So those seasons are now mostly remembered for LeBron's floor-raising greatness than anything. He was the sole reason why they were expected to win it all.


The idea that those teams “weren’t built for deep playoff success given the lack of a proper #2” is just a post-hoc rationale. That’s my point! Did they have a great #2 player? No. But they had a well-constructed and high-performing supporting cast that was the big title favorite in two straight years, even though everyone knew at the time that they did not have a great #2 player.

This is the context surrounding people criticizing LeBron for going to Miami.


Stop :lol:

The criticism LeBron received post-Decision only had to do with 2 things: 1) how he announced it and 2) joining 2 other stars

Nobody cared that he left Cleveland because everybody knew that wasn't a championship level roster. Cavs predictably became the league's worst team the following season without LeBron.


You’re crazy if you think LeBron would’ve gotten as much criticism if the Cavs hadn’t been major title favorites the prior two years. That’s a huge part of the reason him “joining 2 other stars” was seen so negatively. The context of what someone is leaving matters a lot in how people perceive that. If LeBron was leaving an impossible situation where he had had no chance of a title, then people would’ve been a lot less critical of it. What actually happened is that LeBron was seen as having had good chances to win a title and not been able to do so and then left to play with 2 stars. Leaving for something easier is perceived a lot worse when the player is considered to be leaving a major contender for something even easier than that. It’s a big part of why LeBron and Durant got a lot of criticism for going to Miami/GSW, while Garnett and Dame didn’t get a lot of flak for leaving Minnesota and Portland.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#459 » by therealbig3 » Sun Jun 9, 2024 10:58 pm

Rust_Cohle wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
Rust_Cohle wrote:

Very debatable for better defender, Jordan was as good as lebron defensively and Jordan had a better assist to turnover ratio but yes lebron was the better passer but not by much


LeBron was basically a defensive anchor as a wing. That's insane. Jordan was never that.

And I can't really take you seriously if you think passing is close. It's not. LeBron is closer to Magic as a passer than Jordan is to LeBron.

Jordan mythologizing continues.


Wrong, on top of lebron being incredibly inconsistent as a defender after 2013, Jordan’s 87-88 season trumps lebron defensively. Jordan also has more all defensive teams on top of a DPOY.

Assist averages were awfully close, and this is with lebron playing with much better scorers than Jordan. Jordan also averaged a triple double when he did have to play PG.

You don’t know what you’re talking about, hard to take you seriously about anything


So you're determining who the better passer and overall playmaker is based on assists averages and triple doubles, and I don't know what I'm talking about? LeBron is one of the best passers of all time, he's way closer to the likes of Magic Johnson and Steve Nash and Larry Bird than Jordan is to him. Jordan didn't have the vision, the feel, the touch, or the decision-making to run an offense like LeBron.

And you're just listing defensive accolades, why not, idk, actually look at measures of defensive impact and actually watch the games? Jordan was inconsistent defensively his entire career because of how much he gambled on defense, but he had a great team and coaching around him that allowed him to do so. And LeBron may have been inconsistent in the RS, but certainly not in the playoffs. His defensive impact was insane in pretty much every playoff run.

You think Jordan was a better defensive player than Tim Duncan too? He's got a DPOY over him as well. Thankfully, we know better than to just go by media awards. Jordan never had the defensive impact of LeBron, and that's just obvious from the eye test, but it's pretty easy to objectively prove that too. Size matters, IQ matters, and LeBron trumps Jordan there.
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Re: Is there a reasonable argument that MJ was actually better at basketball than LeBron? 

Post#460 » by Slimjimzv » Sun Jun 9, 2024 11:01 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
Rust_Cohle wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
LeBron was basically a defensive anchor as a wing. That's insane. Jordan was never that.

And I can't really take you seriously if you think passing is close. It's not. LeBron is closer to Magic as a passer than Jordan is to LeBron.

Jordan mythologizing continues.


Wrong, on top of lebron being incredibly inconsistent as a defender after 2013, Jordan’s 87-88 season trumps lebron defensively. Jordan also has more all defensive teams on top of a DPOY.

Assist averages were awfully close, and this is with lebron playing with much better scorers than Jordan. Jordan also averaged a triple double when he did have to play PG.

You don’t know what you’re talking about, hard to take you seriously about anything


So you're determining who the better passer and overall playmaker is based on assists averages and triple doubles, and I don't know what I'm talking about? LeBron is one of the best passers of all time, he's way closer to the likes of Magic Johnson and Steve Nash and Larry Bird than Jordan is to him. Jordan didn't have the vision, the feel, the touch, or the decision-making to run an offense like LeBron.

And you're just listing defensive accolades, why not, idk, actually look at measures of defensive impact and actually watch the games? Jordan was inconsistent defensively his entire career because of how much he gambled on defense, but he had a great team and coaching around him that allowed him to do so. And LeBron may have been inconsistent in the RS, but certainly not in the playoffs. His defensive impact was insane in pretty much every playoff run.

You think Jordan was a better defensive player than Tim Duncan too? He's got a DPOY over him as well. Thankfully, we know better than to just go by media awards. Jordan never had the defensive impact of LeBron, and that's just obvious from the eye test, but it's pretty easy to objectively prove that too. Size matters, IQ matters, and LeBron trumps Jordan there.


Jordan was also very consistent on defense in the playoffs. Lebron was a much better passer. Jordon was a much better defender. Both IMO.

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