infinite11285 wrote:I’ve been watching the game for over 40 years, and debates about win-loss records in the Finals were never a major talking point—until LeBron started challenging MJ’s legacy.
Yeah this is a lie… but keep lying to yourself.
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infinite11285 wrote:I’ve been watching the game for over 40 years, and debates about win-loss records in the Finals were never a major talking point—until LeBron started challenging MJ’s legacy.

Blame Rasho wrote:infinite11285 wrote:I’ve been watching the game for over 40 years, and debates about win-loss records in the Finals were never a major talking point—until LeBron started challenging MJ’s legacy.
Yeah this is a lie… but keep lying to yourself.
 
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
               Cavsfansince84 wrote:hugepatsfan wrote:
I think this is kind of revisionist history or a mischaracterization of things. Lebron lost to the Spurs as an underdog in 2007. Next time he made the finals he lost in embarrassing fashion as a favorite while playing like ****. I don't think many people really started disqualifying him or using the "6-0" argument against him in earnest until that loss to DAL with Miami. Because people didn't really have it out for him until the decision. I think holding MJ's 6-0 as something Lebron can't match really started there, not with his one underdog loss to the Spurs in 07.
Some people had it out for LeBron since the day he entered the league and plenty of them have admitted it over the years. The people who put MJ or Kobe on a pedestal have basically hated on him his entire career. Some are able to still appreciate what he can do as a player but 6-0 is just one of many criticisms that have been made against LeBron in an effort to diminish what he actually has accomplished but having said that, I'm ok with him getting criticism for both the 07 and 2011 finals because he deserves some. It's just the idea of 6-0 as the defining point of argument that seems a bit ridiculous. The same way that Russell's 11-1 gets swept away because of 'only 8-10 teams in the league'.
 
                                                                                                          NbaAllDay wrote:UglyBugBall wrote:Bush4Ever wrote:It started to skyrocket when Lebron became an actual threat to Jordan's legacy and old-heads wanted an argument that would permanently disable Lebron's chances (once you lose a 0...it's gone forever), no matter what he did in the future, because for once the idea of a player projecting beyond Jordan was possible to a non-trivial degree.
Reframing "winning" in terms of "not losing a Finals" essentially penalizes players who swim upstream to the Finals, while benefitting players who run downhill (or are in even odds situations).TheGeneral99 wrote:The 6-0 argument is dumb. You shouldn't get penalized for making the finals and losing.
Now the argument that MJ won 6 titles in only 12 year span basically is a strong argument for how great he is.
There are two teams in the finals. That means you have a 50/50 chance of winning, just like whether you flip heads or tails. For Jordan to break that law and bat 100%, while Lebron under performed the expected number is a very important difference. That means Lebron performed worse than chance, meaning you replace him with a random player and they probably win more. The odds of winning 6 straight is 1 in 64 (which are the odds of flipping heads 6 straight times). That's insane.
Hold up, surely you missed the green font? You are actually saying that it's a 50/50 chance for both teams in the Finals?
Everything with 2 outcomes is only a 50/50 chance? Do I dare explain how silly this is to you? My flabbers are gassed at this one.

 
                                                                                                          Big J wrote:AmIWrongDude wrote:NbaAllDay wrote:
What makes the first championship the reasoning for his continued success afterwards?
Does his team getting stronger outside of Jordan have anything to do with it?
Does the elite teams prior to him winning (Pistons/LA/Celtics) falling off at a similar time?
The narrative you have created here is that the sole reason for the Bulls 'remaining on top' was Jordan alone.
There is no argument that he was their most important player and had the most influence. It's just this argument wouldn't hold up if he lost to a better team. Like any of those teams that beat him prior to this.
Thankfully for him (obviously due to him as well) he had the better team in each run so this never occurred but it being used as an argument for his being better than x player doesn't hold any real weight as again, it's a team accomplishment and there are numerous factors than influence this outside of an individual player.
You said it yourself it’s just the “narrative.” MJ was the best and once he got the best supporting cast as well he won again and again. He didn’t magically become a way better player. It’s a team game like u said but everyone pretends it isn’t.
It’s a team game, but individual players have a greater impact on team success than any other team sport.
 
                                                                                                          To me, the “6 for 6” stuff never made much sense, because of course it is better to lose in the Finals than to lose before the Finals. I get that people pay more attention to the Finals, so losing in the Finals maybe ends up worse practically speaking because more people see you fail. But if we’re really having a retrospective discussion about it, it’s not worse to lose in the Finals than to lose before the Finals.
That said, I don’t think the argument for Jordan really relies on the “6 for 6” thing in any meaningful way.
At a very basic level, winning 6 titles is of course better than winning 4 titles, regardless of whether the guy with 6 had meaningful failures or not.
But even looking beyond that, I think we could expand how we think about this to talk about how often these players converted having a legit contending team into a title. By that measure, Jordan isn’t 6 for 6 anymore, but he still looks much better than LeBron IMO.
For instance, in the years the Bulls didn’t win the title, the only years that their pre-playoffs title odds were +1000 or better were in 1990 and 1995. Their odds were +800 and +500 respectively in those years. They were not the favorites either year, but in those two years they were amongst the top few favorites. I think those years can be considered failures from Jordan, because he had a contending team and did not come away with a title. The other years, his team was not a contending-level team and was not given much of any chance of winning the title, despite how good Jordan himself was. So that leaves Jordan as basically being 6 of 8 in terms of titles while on a contending team.
In contrast, we have a lot more years where LeBron had a contending team and didn’t win. Let’s do the same analysis for LeBron. How many non-title years did his team have pre-playoffs title odds of +1000 or better? Eight years! LeBron had non-title-winning years where his teams’ pre-playoffs title odds were +160, +160, +200, +225, +300, +400, +405, and +800! That’s *a lot* more times failing with a contending team. By this measure, LeBron is 4 of 12 with a contending team, while Jordan was 6 of 8.
Of course, one retort to this may be that title odds take into account how good the star is, so LeBron’s teams only had such good odds because of how good he was. That is true. But I think to believe that that created this difference in conversion rate between Michael Jordan and LeBron James, you’d have to believe that LeBron James was considered far better individually than Jordan was—which is not something that strikes me as being plausible. LeBron being on his teams wasn’t moving those odds way more than Jordan being on his teams did.
Another retort to this would be that LeBron had to face the dynasty Warriors. But the Warriors being incredible was baked into the odds in those years (i.e. LeBron’s Cavaliers had worse odds because everyone knew how good the Warriors were), and is relevant for less than half of those listed years anyways.
In any event, I think one can find various excuses for LeBron’s vastly worse conversion rate while being on a contender, but ultimately that conversion rate is part of the story of their greatness, even if you think there’s ways to explain why LeBron converted so much less. Greatness is about what happened. And part of what happened is that Jordan’s teams almost always won the title when they were a contender, and LeBron’s teams usually didn’t win the title when they were contenders.
 
                    
                    
                    
                                                    Tim Lehrbach wrote:hugepatsfan wrote:therealbig3 wrote:I honestly don’t remember going 6-0 being a talking point until LeBron became a GOAT candidate and lost in the Finals as an underdog a bunch of times.
The thing is, people wanted to write off LeBron so bad after the 2011 Finals, and then he ended up dominating the league after that, so Finals record became the only thing to grasp onto.
Rings themselves were never a thing until Jordan either. Wilt was considered a GOAT candidate despite only having 2 rings. Bird was a GOAT candidate despite only having 3 rings.
The rings argument is funny though because people act like Kareem doesn’t have 6 also and that Russell doesn’t nearly double them up with 11. But I guess since he was 11-1 in the Finals it’s not the same as 6-0? We also get into people disrespecting the 60s because they realize their rings argument for Jordan falls apart when they have to give proper respect to Russell’s rings.
I think this is kind of revisionist history or a mischaracterization of things. Lebron lost to the Spurs as an underdog in 2007. Next time he made the finals he lost in embarrassing fashion as a favorite while playing like ****. I don't think many people really started disqualifying him or using the "6-0" argument against him in earnest until that loss to DAL with Miami. Because people didn't really have it out for him until the decision. I think holding MJ's 6-0 as something Lebron can't match really started there, not with his one underdog loss to the Spurs in 07.
People absolutely started disqualifying LeBron from GOAT prior to The Decision. He was dragged mercilessly for how his 2009 and 2010 seasons ended.
 
                                      
                    
                                      
                
                                                                                                          Losing to the Pistons doesn't matter either. Don't get me wrong, 6-0 in the finals is amazing, but if they played the 2016-18 Warriors instead of the 91 Lakers, 92 Blazers, and 93 Suns, then MJ wouldnt be 6-0, he'd have fallen short to atleast two of those teams.dockingsched wrote:Since the memory of losing to shaq and penny in the 95 playoffs became inconvenient
NickAnderson wrote:
How old are you, just curious.
by gomeziee on 21 Jul 2013 00:53
im 20, and i did grow up watching MJ play in the 90's.
 
                    
                                                                                        Blame Rasho wrote:infinite11285 wrote:I’ve been watching the game for over 40 years, and debates about win-loss records in the Finals were never a major talking point—until LeBron started challenging MJ’s legacy.
Yeah this is a lie… but keep lying to yourself.
 LeBron is 0-7 in game winning/tying FGs in the finals. And is 20/116 or 17% in game winning/tying FGs in the 4th/OT for his career.  That's historically bad
  LeBron is 0-7 in game winning/tying FGs in the finals. And is 20/116 or 17% in game winning/tying FGs in the 4th/OT for his career.  That's historically bad 
dautjazz wrote:Losing to the Pistons doesn't matter either. Don't get me wrong, 6-0 in the finals is amazing, but if they played the 2016-18 Warriors instead of the 91 Lakers, 92 Blazers, and 93 Suns, then MJ wouldnt be 6-0, he'd have fallen short to atleast two of those teams.dockingsched wrote:Since the memory of losing to shaq and penny in the 95 playoffs became inconvenient
 
                                                                                                          Im sure he also said that he was going to lose to the 1989 Pistons, 1990 Pistons and 1995 Magic. Look, MJ is a beast, but the best teams he faced early in his career, Bird's Celtics and the Bad Boys Pistons were beating his Bulls teams. I don't think the 1991-93 Bulls stood a chance to the 1986 Celtics, forget the 2017 and 2018 Warriors. I'm quite convinced those Warrior teams were the best teams of all time.Big J wrote:dautjazz wrote:Losing to the Pistons doesn't matter either. Don't get me wrong, 6-0 in the finals is amazing, but if they played the 2016-18 Warriors instead of the 91 Lakers, 92 Blazers, and 93 Suns, then MJ wouldnt be 6-0, he'd have fallen short to atleast two of those teams.dockingsched wrote:Since the memory of losing to shaq and penny in the 95 playoffs became inconvenient
MJ himself said he would have beaten those Warrior teams. I’ll trust him more than someone on a forum.
NickAnderson wrote:
How old are you, just curious.
by gomeziee on 21 Jul 2013 00:53
im 20, and i did grow up watching MJ play in the 90's.
 
                    
                                                        
               
 
                                                                                                          I think context is what matters the most. For example, the 2007 Cavs were a 50 win team that had no business in the NBA finals vs the Spurs. 2011 Finals was definitely a choke job on Lebron's part. 2015, Lebron was without Irving and Love against a 67 win Warriors team, so obviously he lost, going 6 games is a hell of a achievement considering how short handed they were. 2014 Heat, Wade and Bosh stunk in the Finals, and that Spurs team was DAMN good, their offense was like clockwork. Lebron had two bad NBA Finals, including his first where he was just 22 and way overwhelmed. So it's not like Lebron was bad in the finals often, just the two times out of ten finals. MJ had easier opponents in the Finals than Lebron.Liam_Gallagher wrote:Unpopular opinion: 6-0 in the Finals is worse than 6-(any number higher than zero).
NickAnderson wrote:
How old are you, just curious.
by gomeziee on 21 Jul 2013 00:53
im 20, and i did grow up watching MJ play in the 90's.
TheGeneral99 wrote:The 6-0 argument is dumb. You shouldn't get penalized for making the finals and losing.
Now the argument that MJ won 6 titles in only 12 year span basically is a strong argument for how great he is.
 
                                                                                                          kcktiny wrote:
Tell that to Wilt, or Jerry West, or Karl Malone, or Charles Barkley.
Now the argument that MJ won 6 titles in only 12 year span basically is a strong argument for how great he is.
That along with his numerous other accolades. Only adds to the GOAT conversation.
Also, yeah, Jordan won a ton after he broke through. We all know this. Why does that erase the fact that his team lost a lot before that? Again, this kind of hand waving away doesn’t happen with other greats.
Jordan's first 5 full years in the league his teammates that played the most minutes were John Paxson, Dave Corzine, Horace Grant, and Scottie Pippen - one HOFer.
Bird's first 5 years in the league (2 titles) his teammates that played the most minutes were Cedric Maxwell, Robert Parish, Nate Archibald, and Kevin McHale - three HOFers. Not to mention HOFer Dennis Johnson in 1983-84.
Magic's first 5 years in the league (2 titles) his teammates that played the most minutes were Jamaal Wilkes, Jabbar, Norm Nixon, Michael Cooper - three HOFers.
You don't see a difference here? Or you just don't want to acknowledge it?
Also the Bulls did not "lose a lot". Those 5 seasons they averaged 46 wins a season. It's not like they went 20-62 each year.
LeBron overachieving and getting some of the teams he’s had as far as he has is every bit as impressive as 6-0 in the Finals.
It's very impressive. And why he is in the conversation for GOAT.
Just not as impressive as going 6-0 in the Finals and being named Finals MVP each time.
There is no argument that he was their most important player and had the most influence. It's just this argument wouldn't hold up if he lost to a better team.
But he didn't lose. That's the whole point.
In the 6 years the Bulls won the Finals they played 116 playoff games. In those 116 games Jordan played 41 min/g and scored 32.6 pts/g. No other Bulls player scored more than 19 pts/g. Jordan alone scored 1/3 of the Bulls total playoff points those 6 seasons. And he did this while also being 2nd on the team in rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks.
What part of his performance over 6 seasons being totally dominant are you missing?
Thankfully for him (obviously due to him as well) he had the better team in each run so this never occurred
Because he was - by far - the best player on the team, when combining his contributions on both offense and defense.
but it being used as an argument for his being better than x player doesn't hold any real weight
Those 6 seasons the Bulls were the best defensive team in the playoffs (just 101.8 pts/100poss allowed) due first and foremost to him and Pippen.
as again, it's a team accomplishment and there are numerous factors than influence this outside of an individual player.
Like what? How about you explaining these numerous factors for the Bulls' 6 year run of titles.
I mean, Jordan also avoided Hakeem’s Rockets. And started winning when the Celtics/Lakers/Pistons got old and injured.
So what are you trying to infer here? That the Bulls waltzed to 6 titles? That they didn't play anyone good?
In the Finals they beat teams with W-L records of 58-24, 57-25, 62-20, 64-18, 64-18, and 62-20.
In 2022-23 Denver beat a team in the Finals that had a W-L record of 44-38.
What's your point?
But nah, let’s just talk about how Jordan “learned how to win” in that series.
Jordan - just one player - scored 1/3 of the Bulls' total playoff points while at the same time being their best or second best defender over 6 years and 116 playoff games.Basketball analysis needs to be better than that if you’re more than a casual.
Well then tell us, how did the Bulls win 6 titles over an 8 year period?He didn’t magically become a way better player.
But he was in fact a way better player than pretty much everyone he played against in those 6 playoff runs.