Cuban made a good point about the necessity of using specifics to back up your argument, and he's right that Bayless gives Dallas absolutely no credit for beating the Heat. Skip may be right in that LeBron didn't impose his will on Dallas, but the reason LeBron was out of sorts was Dallas' defensive schemes on him, which turned him into a jump shooter—meaning there was no way that LeBron ever could impose his will, even if he'd been more tenacious. Yes, LeBron was more aggressive this Finals in going down into the post, but OKC let him go in the post by sticking with man-to-man defense; the Thunder never even tried forcing Miami to become a strictly jump-shooting team, never did anything more than double LeBron and DWade, which just left hot shooter wide open. After this series, I really question Scott Brooks' coaching ability.
Anyway, I basically like Cuban.