Do you realize the statistical drop off between players at 33 and 35 is a complete cliff though? I realize Lebron is a freak, so this is already giving him a huge benefit of the doubt. Look at this article:
http://wagesofwins.com/nba-players-age-like-milk/
If Lebron was the biggest super man in the world maybe he only declines 20% from 2017 playoffs to 2018 playoffs and 30% from 2018 to 2019. That would be a miracle. Suggesting he can do what Leonard is doing now at 35.5 (his birthday is december) seems really ludicrous and completely off-base from the history of the nba.
Your point about aging is well taken, but I think LeBron has already proven to be an exception to a lot of those trends.
I'm just saying that I think it's premature to declare that LeBron is "not even top 5" anymore.
He's still in the uppermost tier of players, at least when we're talking about who is capable of dominating a post-season series.
My position is that there is no clear cut "best player in the world" right now, because there are so many guys for whom you can make an argument and so much of who ends up on top depends on the context -- luck, teammates, injuries, schemes, opponent matchups. I think that's a really good thing.
I would say he has already been an exception playing at this level at 33 and 34... I am not really ready to suspend believe any further for him not regressing significantly this year (and he did regress pretty significantly last year in my eyes). Also, while we can say we didn't get to see him get into playoff mode last year, he made a public comment about activitating playoff mode early last year
https://ftw.usatoday.com/2019/03/lakers-lebron-james-playoff-mode
and he didn't have enough left in the tank to do it as the Lakers lost to a series of terrible teams....
Thinking he can do what Leonard is doing these playoffs (one of the all time great nba playoff performances) a year down the road from now, is still in my opinion, like i said earlier absolutely crazy.
your eyes deceive you. Basically every defensive metric said Lebron was better in LA than he was his last year in Cleveland. And his counting stats were basically the same. Obviously he missed a lot more games and his shooting percentages were all down, which affected his offensive efficiency, but he was still scoring, rebounding, and passing better than his career averages. And Lebron clearly kicked it up a very large amount in the playoffs in Cleveland significantly improving upon his regular season counting stats and his advanced metrics across the board.
And let's be clear, once Leonard was actually guarding Giannis, his efficiency suffered a lot. In fact, his efficiency has gone down a lot since game 4 of the Philly series, when he was asked to do a lot more. 8 of the first 9 playoff games he shot over 54%, including 5 at 60% or better. Since that time he has been above 46.2% just 1 time. Kawhi quite simply isn't used to running an offense and he is getting tired. It takes so much out of a player to bring the ball up the court, direct the offense, and have everything run through you. Kawhi, quite simply, has never been that type of player and it is also why he can be locked in defensively far more frequently than many of the other great players. It is also why I've always been less high on him than others are. I still think he is the 5th best player in the world, but I'd absolutely have Giannis, Durant, Curry, and James ahead of him and I wouldn't give it a second thought.