He was exhausted by the finals. He carried the team all the way to the finals
What about Bosh and Wade? Both of them had monster moments in the other playoff series. In fact, compared to his performances in Cleveland, even Lebron's best performances in this year's playoffs were relatively unimpressive. Not that he didn't make a lot of crazy 3s, but he wasn't averaging 30 points a game or anything like he did against Orlando. He may have been exhausted, mentally, but it's not fair to the rest of the Heat to say that Lebron carried them there.
and they came up against an extremely good team who's lone superstar was on FIRE for the entire playoffs.
Dirk's shooting averages for the Finals were lower than his regular season averages. And he went 1-12 in the first half. Dirk was not the reason Miami lost. Did you even watch the games? It was the Dallas bench that decided the series; they outplayed both the Miami bench and, at times, the Miami starters.
Wade decided to hog the ball a lot more in the finals for some reason and this hurt the Heat more than anything. His repetitive isolations just killed his teams flow and chemistry- they never got in a rhythm after game 4 and Wade was the chief antagonist for this- not Lebron.
Actually, the usage rates for Lebron and Wade were similar over the course of the finals. 26 and 27 percent, respectively. That's not a significant difference, so you can't blame Wade hogging the ball. I think Mario Chalmers clocking in at 23% is inexcusable (Bosh was only 16, tied with Eddie House and below Juwan Howard!). That's criminal misuse of offensive possessions. Chris Bosh was underused, he was the most efficient player on the Heat this Finals series; Lebron clocked in at a measly 4th. His Wins Produced numbers were 0.019, which is unbelievably atrocious (for reference, the average NBA player is 0.100, and Lebron's wins produced for the earlier playoff rounds was a mind-blowing 5.46). In essence, the statistics do not agree with your assessment.
I'd put him in between someone like Magic Johnson and Clyde Drexler- or a bit higher than their level.
I'd put Lebron on Drexler's level, at least at this point in his career. But Magic Johnson is far and above Lebron. A completely different style of basketball player, but far more skilled at team facilitation and WINNING CHAMPIONSHIPS.
They had the best defense in the league and not a single center. They had a 6 foot 9 power forward playing center and they made the NBA finals. Imagine if they had someone that could compete with Chandler in the paint.
Did you watch, like, ANY of this season? The Miami Heat by no means had the best defense in the league. Depending on which stat category you put most weight into, it's either the Bulls or the Celtics. The Heat just have absurdly good individual defenders, though their team defense is spotty at best.
Everyone's entitled to their opinions but don't overreact by calling him a failure. His legacy has just begun.
wait till he's at least 30 years old.
See, this is all well and good, except for the fact that this past off-season Lebron himself claimed that the Heat were going to win 7+ championships. His behavior, and his team-mate's behavior, all season has been one of unbelievable arrogance. Yeah, he's not a failure, and he still has many years in the NBA, but we can still call him out for dropping the ball this year. Just because we aren't in love with him like you are doesn't mean we are overreacting.