LeBron has been in the NBA Finals in the past and has hasd multiple instances of tremendous success, both from an individual and team perspective, in the playoffs.
To me I think after LeBron made it to the Finals he lost his fire.
I'm not going to say that he had success to early because to me you can never have success to early and you should always want to win, but I think after that he thought it was going to be easier then it is.
I disagree.
I think Cleveland just kept downgrading his supporting cast. He was still very close to eliminating the Celtics in the following year though. They were the 2nd best team in those playoffs and the one which actually had a good shot of knocking down the eventual champions.
I think Cleveland did so well against the Celts because they played them while the team was still getting their playoff legs. If they'd have played the Hawks in the second round it would never have gone farther than 5 games if it went that far. If we'd played the Pistons and then the Cavs we'd have struggled more with the Pistons and had an easier time dispatching the Cavs. We made both the Hawks and the Cavs look better than they were.
I can't agree to that, particularly about the Cavs. Though part of it was growing pains for us in the playoffs (particularly with our young backup forwards and Rondo), the main problem they presented for us was the way they were defending which was great, and that's no fluke. Part of the problem was how they neutralized Ray with quick traps, and got him completely out of rhythm. Rondo was quite bad distributing and moving the ball in that series, which also affected Ray in many regards.
Thank god that PJ and House stepped up when we needed him at the tail end of that series... Doc should've gone to House a bit more earlier.
The Cavs won 45 games that year and got outscored by their opponents. They lost 2 games in their first round series to Washington, who were also outscored by their opponents for the year. They were nowhere near the team the Lakers were and we had an easier time beating the Lakers than the Cavs.
Terrible argument, you're comparing two different teams.
1 - To start the season, they had that problem with Varejao and Pavlovic. Restricted free agents who refused to sign new contracts. They missed training camp, the first 40 games or so and then had to play into shape.
2 - LeBron was injured and they lost every singe game he didn't play, 9 games or so.
3 - More importantly, they had that big trade at the trade deadline. Brought in Delonte West, Wally, Ben Wallace and Joe Smith. All of them would log big minutes in the playoffs.
Their starting 5 to start the season was Hughes, LeBron, Newble, Gooden and Ilgauskas, IIRC. Gibson and guys like Devin Brown off the bench. Then they added Varejao and Pavlovic to the rotation. Then they needed to build a new team at the trade deadline. From their playoff rotation, only LeBron, Big Z and Boobie Gibson were in their regular season rotation for the regular season. Two very different teams. Once that post-trade team gelled they were much more dangerous. Very good defensively - Ben Wallace, Varejao, West. Wally was playing excellent defense, he was out of knee pain for the first time in a long period. A team that clearly stepped up their game for the playoffs. They'd beat the Lakers - they'd have the defense to slow them down, to swarm Kobe as the Celtics did and Los Angeles wouldn't be able to contain LeBron James. Not with Radmanovic and Gasol/Odom inside.