That 'where he stands with the great ones' conversation unfortunately happens every few minutes and in the midst of the playoffs. Nonetheless, as you say carrying this Heat team is indicative of just how great LeBron is right now. Without LeBron the Heat would be worse than any of the other 16 NBA playoff teams (including the Bobcats if you added back Jefferson).After winning a couple of Ships he is a changed playoff players and is carrying a team of injured and aged veterans. He also seems to love playing basketball, and I now notice an attitude of hating to lose. He abused Paul Pierce from what I saw, with a mean face while at it.
The thing about Lebron that I noticed is that if he wants to take over a game, make a needed shot or do anything that ensures victory, there ain't a player in the NBA can stop him. I don't have the same feeling about Durant as good as he is.
You can argue all you want about where he stands with the great ones, but you can't argue that he doesn't belong in the conversation.
That 'where he stands with the great ones' conversation unfortunately happens every few minutes and in the midst of the playoffs. Nonetheless, as you say carrying this Heat team is indicative of just how great LeBron is right now. Without LeBron the Heat would be worse than any of the other 16 NBA playoff teams (including the Bobcats if you added back Jefferson).
I also agree on Durant, he can be unstoppable in the open floor going to the basket, but in the half court the defense can force him into contested jumpers and he settles for these tough jump shots too often. Durant needs to be a little more Dirk Nowitzkish and add a mid-post up game where he can get higher % shots or go to line. Probably next year.
He tries to but he's so skinny that he gets pushed off his spot easily by most NBA forwards (and some guards)
he's roughly the same weight as Dirk.
He played even even greater then the box score indicated, he was dominant on the defensive end shutting down Joe Johnson. Ray hit some clutch shuts and got some key rebounds btw.
Will ultimately pass Jordan to be considered the greatest ever...
he's roughly the same weight as Dirk.
We'll see about that. Jordan won an MVP and a DPOY award in the same year. I think it is going to be very hard to get much closer in titles unless he completely changes teams--and he's 29 this year: Kobe won his most recent (read, last) at 31. Jordan did so at 35, so there's a chance...but I guess I'm skeptical.Will ultimately pass Jordan to be considered the greatest ever...
The Nets going to Iso Joe on back to back plays down the stretch with the game on the line was mind boggling. JJ has hit a bunch of clutch shots during his tenure with the Nets but I'm not going in that direction with Bron on him and the game in the balance.
We'll see about that. Jordan won an MVP and a DPOY award in the same year. I think it is going to be very hard to get much closer in titles unless he completely changes teams--and he's 29 this year: Kobe won his most recent (read, last) at 31. Jordan did so at 35, so there's a chance...but I guess I'm skeptical.
He'll probably end up with more MVPs than Jordan, but that's because we're in an era that discusses these things more heavily, and people tend to not be okay with just giving the award to someone out of fatigue. Jordan should have had 7, but ended with 5 because people decided to go with Barkley and Malone in 1993 and 1997. Meanwhile, Durant clearly had a better statistical year than LeBron this year, so it was reasonable to give it to him.
I agree with the person who said that he was the best in the post-Jordan era. That group is 1) LeBron, 2) Duncan, and then Kobe and Shaq (I can listen to either order there). And I'll never say he won't catch Jordan...but I'll be interested to see him try.
I think he is the type of player you have to see in person (good seats) to appreciate. I will try and see him play live, as he is the only player above all of our alumni that a person shouldn't miss seeing once in their lifetime. I made the mistake with Michael, I don't want to repeat it with him. Greatness like that comes once in a generation.He's certainly the best player I've seen since Jordan in his prime. I'd love to see Jordan vs. LeBron, 1v1, in their respective primes.
I agree with all that.
I think LeBron could catch MJ if he ends up winning a bunch more titles -- either in Miami or elsewhere. As Wade gets more and more run down, LeBron is going to have carry more of the weight (assuming they stay together). If he does that and wins a handful of additional titles, that could end up elevating LeBron's legacy to MJ's level. It's hard to envision any scenario where he passes MJ unless he wins 7 titles.
LeBron had 5 fouls so they felt like he wouldn't be as aggressive defensively and JJ could get a good shot. I don't necessarily agree but that was their line of thinking.
that is true, but in a way it seemed like they were more concerned with drawing the 6th foul on Bron than actually running any offense or getting a good look, it just stymied their whole attack there at the end.
LeBron should have won the MVP the year Rose did
Karl Malone's MVP was a consolation prize if there ever was one. Like Sammy Sosa winning it in '98.Indeed, he was the better statistical player that year. But, I think there was a more reasonable argument for Rose than there was for either Barkley or Malone. Rose's team had beaten LeBron's 3 times in the year, and had the best record in the Eastern Conference, despite clearly not being as talented as the Heat. And it's not like LeBron led in any of the basic statistical categories (scoring, assists, rebounds) which really shouldn't matter much, but they do. It was still the wrong call, but I think more defensible than either of Jordan's losses.
You can perhaps make the argument with Barkley (his team did have the better record although Jordan still led the league in scoring [and PER and WS] by a mile), but to give Malone the MVP over Jordan when Jordan's team won 69 games? Ridiculous.
Indeed, he was the better statistical player that year. But, I think there was a more reasonable argument for Rose than there was for either Barkley or Malone. Rose's team had beaten LeBron's 3 times in the year, and had the best record in the Eastern Conference, despite clearly not being as talented as the Heat. And it's not like LeBron led in any of the basic statistical categories (scoring, assists, rebounds) which really shouldn't matter much, but they do. It was still the wrong call, but I think more defensible than either of Jordan's losses.
You can perhaps make the argument with Barkley (his team did have the better record although Jordan still led the league in scoring [and PER and WS] by a mile), but to give Malone the MVP over Jordan when Jordan's team won 69 games? Ridiculous.
Except when you have three players the caliber of James, Wade, and Bosh, those things don't matter as much. Rose was playing with Noah, Deng, and Boozer. Noah has blossomed since, but none of those guys were of the caliber of 2011 Wade or Bosh.Miami, outside of the Big 3, wasn't very talented that year. The rest of their rotation was Chalmers, Haslem, Mike Bibby (fully washed up, but actually started a good bit of the year), Erick Dampier (ditto), Big Z (ditto), Eddie House (ditto), Joel Anthony, James Jones, and Mike Miller (injured pretty much all year). They made major upgrades the next season with Shane Battier, Norris Cole, and Rony Turiaf, a healthy Mike Miller (relatively) and of course Ray Allen the following summer.