about Drew Gooden, Larry Hughes, Mo Williams, Anderson Verajo, Jeff Mcinnis, Ron Murray, D-West,
Williams and Varejao are the only guys there I would consider to be above average players. I think LeBron is a pompous blowhard, but his teammates mostly sucked during his first tenure in Cleveland.
Gooden was giving them 14pts/9rebs his first season. Larry Hughes averaged 22pts/6rebs/5ast the year before he joined the Cavs. He was the 2nd scorer behind LeBron his first season there. Hughes was defensive first team in 2005 and led the league in steals. Those are good players.
Come on man, you are being ridiculous, but again let's be consistent.
The year before Jordan joined the Bulls here are the stats of the guys he played with
Woolridge - 19/5 on 53% shooting
Dailey - 18/3/3
Greenwood - 12/10
Corzine - 12/7/2.5
Pretty good stats for which Jordan was added along with former 2-time 1st team all defense and all star Caldwell Jones and Steve Johnson who after playing with Jordan finished 11th in MVP voting in 87 and was an all star in 88 before getting hurt.
Why didn't the Bulls win more than 38 games and why did they lose 3-1 to the Bucks in the 1st round of the playoffs?
The next year they still had Woolridge, Dailey, and Corzine, but added Oakley, Paxson, Gene Banks (who in the 4 years preceding the Bulls per 36 averaged 15/8/3.5 shooting 54.4%), and HOFer George Gervin. Now Gervin was at the end of his career, but had been an all star the 11 years directly before joining the Bulls and still averaged over 16 ppg his one year in Chicago. Jordan missed a lot of the season, but was back and healthy for the playoffs. They got swept in the 1st round and were blown out in 2 of the 3 games.
Why didn't the Bulls win a single playoff game?
Now surely the next year was different. I mean Oakley was older and better, Corzine, Paxson, Banks were still "good" and they added Sedale Threatt in his 4th year mid season who at his peak was a 15/7 player. They also added NBA Champion Earl Cureton and the 9th pick in the draft Brad Sellers. Surely it was different this time with a more mature Jordan. Nope, swept again.
Finally in 1988, the Bulls add a rookie out of Central Arkansas with the 5th pick and also added the 10th pick out of Clemson, and everything changed. They won a playoff series that year and even got a game from the Pistons. The next year as Pippen and Grant started to develop into what they'd become, they went to the ECF and picked up a game on the Pistons, losing in 6. Then in 90, pushed the Pistons to 7 before finally breaking through in 91 when Pippen (and Grant) were in their actual primes.
The point of this post is not claim Jordan played with great players (though Oakley and Woolridge were fine and Gervin was a HOFer), but merely to point out that you need to be consistent in your analysis. You can't claim that the Cavs had good players and then ignore similar stats and skilled players on the Bulls or any other team from the past. The Cavs were a trainwreck for Lebron's first 7 years there. They made stupid trades, they brought in terrible free agent signings, and they let Boozer out of his contract to try and usurp the rules only for Boozer to leave for Utah. It was just dumb decision after dumb decision. They were never going to get Lebron a legitimate running mate. Heck, the Raptors and Cavs had even worked out a free agency trade for Bosh, but Bosh refused to go to Cleveland. It took a few years but Dan Gilbert settled into his newer ownership, hired some quality front office people, and generally stayed out of the way but kept the check book open. They needed Lebron to leave, so they could trade off players, get draft picks, and tank for a few years. They don't make the Baron Davis trade (which led to Kyrie) if Lebron is still on the team. They don't end up in a position to draft Wiggins, Thompson, Waiters, etc. if Lebron is still there. That rebuilding period taught Gilbert and the front office how to actually run a team (Bennett pick notwithstanding). That created a situation where Lebron could come back and believe they could field an actual winning team. But he had to leave. Just like Jordan had to retire for the Bulls to do the same thing. Jordan came back when the necessary changes had been made for the team to win again (and they still had Pippen which certainly didn't hurt).