1. Where LeBron Could Leave Biggest Mark
ESPN The Magazine
I don't envy LeBron James. Sure, I'd love to have millions of dollars, a ridiculous hoop game, a home that's a cross between the Four Seasons and Six Flags, and the entire sports world going bananas over me.
But man, this is one tough decision. Do you leave and become a pariah in your home state, an area you love so much? Or do you stay and risk never winning a championship, even as other teams position themselves to dwarf the roster you have in Cleveland?
I guess it just comes down to what does LeBron James want to be? And the fact is that if he wants to go down as the greatest basketball player in history, this grueling decision suddenly becomes easy: He stays in Cleveland.
If LeBron James turns the Cavaliers into a dynasty, he can surpass Michael Jordan as the best of all time. By dynasty, I mean at least four rings.
In Cleveland, LeBron has no Pippen, no Shaq in his prime, no Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. He doesn't even have a Pau Gasol or a Dennis Rodman, who let's not forget was a lockdown defender and the best rebounder of his era by a wide margin.
If he wins titles with the crew he has in Cleveland -- going through Kobe Bryant, the Big Three in Boston, Dwyane Wade, Dwight Howard, Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant and the rest of this generation's greats -- it could be more impressive than MJ going through Ewing, Hakeem, Barkley, Karl Malone, Clyde Drexler and all the Hall of Famers he kept ringless.
And it's not as if his Cavs are that far away. They've had the league's top record the last two seasons, and if LeBron hadn't struggled uncharacteristically in those last three games of the Eastern Conference semifinals, I'm convinced Cleveland would have beaten Boston, Orlando and quite possibly the Lakers this year.
Of course, the Cavs didn't, so the question remains: Is LeBron only good enough to get them close or is he good enough to take them all the way? There's no shame if he's the former, because there's not a man alive who could take them as far as he has by himself (no, not even Kobe). And that's precisely why he has the opportunity to go down as the G.O.A.T.
Right now, we debate about how many Top 50 All-Time teammates a guy had on his title team: Jordan, Magic, Bird, Kobe, Oscar -- they've all had at least one on most of their championship clubs. Isiah Thomas had no Top 50 teammates and led Detroit to back-to-back titles, beating Bird, Jordan and Magic. That's why he's widely regarded as the greatest small player ever.
But heck, some would argue that LeBron barely has a teammate among the top 50 players in the league today. That's why four with this bunch in Cleveland could be the equivalent of Jordan's six.
But there's a risk. A huge one.
If LeBron stays in Cleveland, he may never win it all.
As a former Clevelander, I'd love to see him stay, but there's no way I can honestly say it's the best basketball decision for him. In fact, as someone who has a friendly relationship with LeBron and wants to see him win rings, I'll admit that a part of me will worry for him if he decides to stay put. Because if he doesn't win titles -- not title, but titles (plural) -- he will go down as a failure.
Oh, he's already assured himself of a spot in the Hall of Fame. But he'll join the wing where Barkley, Karl Malone, Elgin Baylor and that whole group of outstanding players who never won a championship reside; not the part reserved for MJ, Magic, Bird, etc. With all the hype that's accompanied him and all the talent in his body, that'd be a massive underachievement.
And the risk factor is growing. Depending on how this summer plays out, LeBron may not only have to go through Boston and Orlando next year just to get to the Finals; he may also have star-laden clubs in Chicago and maybe Miami to overcome.
From a purely basketball standpoint, two of LeBron's potential scenarios stand out above the rest, assuming he gets Chris Bosh to join him in either place: Chicago and New Jersey.
If LeBron and Bosh go to Chicago, they can win several rings. Derrick Rose is one of the top point guards in the league, and Joakim Noah is the ultimate role player. Taj Gibson, James Johnsonand Luol Deng (if he's not traded for some outside shooters) provide depth.
One NBA coach who's close to LeBron told me his goal is to win seven rings in 10 years. That's a ton of course, but with that crew as a core, another Bulls dynasty is certainly possible.
Then there's Jersey. If LeBron and Bosh team up with 7-foot center Brook Lopez, point guardDevin Harris and their cast of talented young role players, they could win big for years and years.
Miami? Even with LeBron, D-Wade and Bosh, I think Chicago and New Jersey are better situations (again, assuming Bosh joins LeBron). If LeBron wins with that trio in Miami, critics will say he needed Wade to pull it off. And since Wade already won a ring in Jordanesque fashion without LeBron, some may even argue that he was the leader, not LeBron.
In Chicago and New Jersey, while those all-star teammates are talented, none is close enough to LeBron for his status as the team's leader to be questioned.
But while multiple titles in Chicago and New Jersey could put LeBron in the company of Magic, Bird, Kobe and the other all-time elites, he almost certainly could never equal or eclipse Jordan.
The argument would be that MJ entered the league in the same situation as LeBron -- drafted by a dreadful franchise -- and he turned it into a dynasty. They'd say Jordan didn't join the best, he beat the best. That he didn't want to play with Barkley and Olajuwon and Payton, he wanted to dominate them.
It's a ridiculously high standard to live up to, and it may not be fair to hold LeBron to such a criterion. But you become the G.O.A.T. only by doing what no one's ever done before.
Before Michael, they said a title team couldn't be built around a shooting guard, that no dynasty could exist without a star center, that you couldn't lead the league in scoring and win championships. After Michael, or better yet During Michael, those myths became history.
Will LeBron make history? Without question.
Will he make the kind of history we've never seen before?
Only in Cleveland.
ESPN The Magazine's Chris Broussard is a regular contributor to the Daily Dime
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