What a 24 hours for basketball! But before we run through
why LeBron James (who will always be tied to our Dwyane Wade) takes the court tonight at Golden State having passed Michael
Jordan as the most valuable player of all time, let's talk about what happened
just before the midnight deadline for players to return to their colleges
rather than stay eligible for the NBA draft in three weeks ...
At 11:33 p.m. ET last night, Cody Martin tweeted that he
would return to Nevada, and at 11:34 his twin Caleb Martin confirmed he would
stay as well - beating the Midnight deadline for players to leave the NBA draft
t return to school. Kentucky, Villanova, Tennessee, Maryland and Virginia Tech
were not so lucky, losing players to drop in the www.valueaddbasketball.com top
25.
However, Kentucky's replacement players were so good that
they actually remained the No. 3 team in the nation. Duke passed them for No.
2, but Villanova fell from No. 2 to No. 10 - with Kansas rounding out the
projected Final Four. Here is the top 25 with notes on teams that lost players
to the NBA once and for all at Midnight.
Team Top 8 Value Add
1. Nevada 52.98 – Cody and Caleb Martin announced
return at 11:33 pm to keep them at No. 1 with 52.98 combined Value Add.
2. Duke 46.65
3. Kentucky stayed in third despite 241st Vanderbilt
(5.17) & 272nd Gabriel (4.93) dropping but being replaced by almost as good
9th and 10th men (8.22 combined Value Add) as Villanova dropped further and
Duke moved ahead of Kentucky’s 45.33
4. Kansas 42.26
5. Oregon 41.52
6. North
Carolina 40.31
7. Mississippi
St. 40.05
8. Louisiana
St. 39.18
9. Auburn 38.66
10. Villanova dropped from 2nd after 25th ranked Spellman
(8.01 Value Add) & 32nd DiVincenzo, (7.84) both left and replacements are a
combined 6.85 to lower team from 47.51 to 38.51
11. Gonzaga 37.94
12. Tennessee dropped from 6th after Alexander, 5.89 left
and with (1.25 replacement) lowered from 42.01 to 37.37
13. Syracuse 37.44
14. North Carolina
St. 35.07
15. Indiana 34.95
16. Virginia 34.62
17. Texas 34.28
18. UCLA 34.26
19. Kansas St. 34.16
20. Michigan
St. 33.63
21. Marquette 33.13
22. Maryland 39.36 – dropped from 9th after 33rd ranked
Huerter (7.82) left and only a 1.23 replacement to lower from 39.36 to 32.77
23. Florida 32.73
24. Iowa 32.49
25. Arizona St. 32.1 (moved from 26th to 25th due to
Virginia Tech dropping out)
Dropped Out - Virginia Tech
33.49 – dropped from 21st to 33rd after 381th ranked Alexander-Walker
(4.25 Value Add) left with only 1.32 replacement Value Add to drop from 33.49
to 30.85
... now back to the inconvenient truth that LeBron James
takes the court tonight as the GOAT, at least if that means the most valuable
player in the history of basketball. Now that all of my friends in North
Carolina and Chicago have stopped reading, let's walk through this.
As Golden State opens as a double digit favorite in the
opener of the NBA Finals, Michael Jordan fans are likely to still be able to
cling to their one argument for his superiority over LeBron James - six
championships.
This ignores the fact that Jordan was one of THREE Hall of
Famers playing at HOF levels (one of those years all three were in the top 15 in MVP voting) were on the 4th, 5th and 6th championship, and that argument leaves Jordan
behind Robert Horry (7 titles), a legitimate contender for the greatest of
all-time in Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and many previous players who had more than six.
In this his 15th season, LeBron James was more than twice as
valuable as Jordan was in his 15th and final season based on career Win Shares
(the only way to truly compare players from different eras).
In fact, in his five seasons without Hall of Famer Scottie
Pippen on the court with him, Jordan never even had a winning season, averaging
just 30 wins and 52 losses. Jordan apologists complained when James went to
Miami to likewise team up with a future Hall of Fame Player in Marquette's Dwyane Wade -
but James did not need a Hall of Fame teammate to make his teams awesome -
averaging a 51-31 record in the years before and after he and Wade teamed up.
So when they had to carry their teams without the help of
another Hall of Fame player, James’ teams were 21 wins better than Jordan's teams.
It is also fair to note that while Pippen finished 5th, 7th
and 9th in MVP voting three of his years with Jordan, and in one year Dennis
Rodman gave Jordan TWO teammates in the top 15 in voting - only one season has
LeBron ever had a top 9 teammate (Wade 7th, as his best player was prior to James' arrival). In short, Jordan never produced nearly the same results as Jordan
EXCEPT when he had Hall of Fame support far superior to the poor cast James
dragged to the NBA Finals some of his years.
The three years before Jordan arrived in Chicago, the Bulls
averaged a 36-46 record. Jordan played three seasons before another Hall of
Fame player arrived, and during his three years befoer adding Pippen Jordan's teams averaged the
identical 36-46 record. Jordan scored a lot - but his team was no better with
him until another Hall of Famer came along.
Compare this to the transformation of the Cavs after James’
arrival. The Cavs prior to James were far worse than the Bulls prior to Jordan,
with a 17-65 record. For an apples to apples, they averaged 25-67 in the 3
years prior to James arrival (11 games worse than the pre-Jordan Bulls), yet in
their first three years with James the averaged 42-40 for a 17 average
improvement in wins to ZERO for Jordan.
Jordan did not lead his team to a winning record until he
was 25 and Pippen had arrived - but by age 25 James finished his seventh season
having taken his Cavs to an average mark of 50-32 before leaving to Miami to
team up with a player almost at Pippen’s level in Wade.
The difference continued throughout their careers. In the
years before or after James and Jordan left and arrived, James’ teams averaged
being 22 games better with him than without him and Jordan's teams did not
improve at all until an extra Hall of Famer was added to the roster.
The dreadful Cavs improved 18 games as soon as the teenager
James took the court. When he went from the Cavs to the Heat the Cavs lost 42
more games and the Heat won 11 more games. When he went back to the Cavs they
won 20 more games and the Heat lost 17 more, for an average of 22 more wins a
season with than without James.
Season
|
LeBron arriving or departing
|
W
|
L
|
Before and After
|
2003-04
|
Cleveland Cavaliers
|
35
|
47
|
18
|
2009-10
|
Cleveland Cavaliers
|
61
|
21
|
42
|
2010-11
|
Miami Heat
|
58
|
24
|
11
|
2013-14
|
Miami Heat
|
54
|
28
|
17
|
2014-15
|
Cleveland Cavaliers
|
53
|
29
|
20
|
Teams 22 games better w/LeBron
|
22
|
Contrast this with the amazing lack of difference Jordan’s
departures and returns made. When he arrived from UNC he made the Bulls one
game worse at 27-55, and as noted did not improve them one game over his first
three years. When he took the 1993-94 season off the Bulls were only two games
worse.
James critics will note that Jordan then came back for only
part of the 1994-95 season, but he was there for the entire playoffs and the
team did just as well as they did the year before without him - a loss in the
Conference Semifinals. The next year they had a monster year - but remember
that was only after adding a THIRD Hall of Fame Player in Dennis Rodman to the
them.
And then Jordan played his final two seasons with the
Wizards’ - his 14th and 15th seasons, but unlike James’ 14th and 15th seasons
he was simply not very good, getting a couple of MVP mentions the first year and then having a nice farewell tour. The Wizards’ were 10 games worse when he arrived,
and just as good the year after he left.
That means the only time a team was more than two games better the year after or
before Jordan left was after the 1997-98 season - WHEN ALL THREE HALL OF FAME
PLAYERS LEFT AT ONCE.
Season
|
Jordan arriving or departing
|
W
|
L
|
Before and After
|
1983-84
|
Chicago Bulls
|
27
|
55
|
-1
|
1992-93
|
Chicago Bulls
|
57
|
25
|
2
|
1994-95
|
Chicago Bulls
|
47
|
35
|
-8
|
1997-98
|
Chicago Bulls***
|
62
|
20
|
41
|
2000-01
|
Washington Wizards
|
19
|
63
|
-10
|
2001-02
|
Washington Wizards
|
37
|
45
|
0
|
Teams 4 games better w/Jordan
|
4
|
*** because of the 1998-99 strike, the Bulls record is projected with 21 wins
Jordan was an incredible leader of teams with other Hall of
Fame players, and he knew how to close when his teammates were superior to all
the opponents they would face. I will even grant that his three best seasons may have been slightly better than any of James' seasons.
However, James’ ability to take teams that should not be in
the playoffs all the way to the NBA Finals time and time again is a much
dramatic than Jordan’s ability to make sure his Hall of Fame teammates did not
blow championships.
James passed Jordan and he is still playing strong.
Unless you want to argue that Horry is greater than Jordan
because of the extra championship, it is time to admit there is a new all time
King.
Thank you for all of your work on this web page.
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