Chemistry & compatability are two factors that have played a huge role in my drafting so far. I want guys that will complement each other well rather than, necessarily, a team of all-stars. We saw in recent Olympics and World Championships before '08 how a team of all-stars fares. I pretty much took that philosophy and extended it here. I want role players and guys who excelled at the very highest levels (Olympics & NBA Finals) but who also fit in and seem to know their roles. From a matchup standpoint, I really don't think its going to hurt me because I can mix & match these guys to cater to whatever they're going up against.
My three cents.
And therein lies the question. How did the '08 Olympic Team and Dream Team and the team after the Dream Team succeed while so many others failed. To me it isn't quality of role player nearly as much as quality of character of the player that was the difference with those teams.
For that reason I tried like hell to fill my roster with the absolute best talent but stayed away from players(for the most part) that were head cases or locker room problems(Marion maybe the only exception) or were super ball dominant players. Almost every player on my team played with other superstars or on star laden teams and had to sacrifice their games accordingly at some point in their careers. To me that shows they are superstar level players that get "it" much like the players on the Dream and Redeem Teams were where so many other Olympic and World Championship teams weren't.
I also love Dons approach as well and think it works tremendously. I won't pick out any other team but there are teams that have multiple ball dominant players that have never been known to acquiesce to others. That will be a huge problem chemistry wise for those teams.
This was my approach as well. I do think "role players" get pretty overrated in the NBA today...well, not overrated compared to other players of this era or compared to "value," but compared to other players of the past.
So once a team wins a title, we all like to retroactively construct the narrative of how each component of the title run was necessary for the championship, as well as simultaneously concluding that any alterations to any of those components would have meant no title.
In today's NBA, role players always end up being valuable, but more because of the salary structure of the NBA: you can't have that many great players on one team and pay them all.
(Let's be clear, though, at the same time there are certain types of stars: those that love sharing the ball and winning (high character high efficiency stars) and those that need to "get there's." I think it's clear that Golden State tried to stack their squad with multi-dimensional high-character guys who do their thing efficiently.)
But because of the salary structure, by definition A particular role player will be important to a championship team, not necessarily because that role player is vital to the team's success, but because the NBA requires that role players be a part of the team.
Take Robert Horry. Yes, he made plays that contributed to several Spurs titles. So now the story goes the Spurs needed his particular plays in order to win the title. I would argue two things: 1. It is a thousand times more the case that Horry needed Manu, Parker, and Duncan to win the title more than they needed Horry, and 2. Had Horry been replaced with a better player who had a good attitude (say, KG), the championship run would have unfolded in an unforeseeable way, but they very likely would still have won the title without needing the specific clutch plays Horry provided.
Another example: PJ Brown.
Fact: C's do not win the title if PJ Brown doesn't make his 4th quarter jumpers.
Myth: No matter what, there was going to be a need for those jumpers.
Myth 2: Only PJ Brown had the exact skill set to make those jumpers
Myth 3: No other player in that position would have netted the title, as events needed to unfold exactly as they did in order to win.
So what if we swapped out PJ Brown and threw in in-his-prime Marcus Camby? Camby can certainly drain elbow jumpers. But let's be honest, do we need elbow jumpers if we have Prime Marcus Camby for 7 games? And you might say Camby would be unhappy coming off the bench behind Perk. Well, as Nick pointed out, What are his options? Camby has a great attitude, so players of his skill level in this league cannot start for another team (they're all all-time teams) so they know they're bench players. Point is, on the floor, Camby's a great team player. And besides, this is an all-time team, so he's not sitting behind Perk, his sitting behind DPOY/In Prime Alonzo Mourning.
This is not to bash Don's picks. Horry was a very good pick, a good all-round player with a good attitude. My point is that just because Horry was a good all round player with a good attitude who happened to have the good luck to sign with several elite teams does not mean that a BETTER all round good player with a good attitude also could have won titles...just that, financially, the spurs couldn't fit him into their team.
In conclusion, I think it's more important to consider the skills and teamsmanship/general attitude of players and not as much the retroactively placed "elite role player" tag in and of itself.