But you do see the point Crimson.
Love is so easy to replace, where as Wiggins has dominant scorer written all over him, and with Lebron's tutelage on defense. Wiggins and Irving in their prime with 35 year old Lebron and there still winning championships.
Yes and no.
Love averaged around 16 - 17 PPG this season as a third option on #1 seed and also averaged somewhere around 10 rebounds a game, while offering a floor stretching ability that is pretty critical for a team like the Cavs (since Lebron cannot shoot).
Wiggins averaged ~20 PPG on a bottom 5 team, and in all honesty he didn't offer a whole lot to his team outside of scoring. He's not a playmaker, not much of a defender, not a great ball handler, and he's also not a very good shooter.
Would Wiggins and Lebron on the court together even work? Hard to say. If it did, how much would Wiggins' scoring numbers have dropped playing behind Lebron and Kyrie? I'd be surprised if he avearged more than around 16 PPG.
Wiggins certainly has potential as a scorer, but for him to really make the most of that potential he's going to have to develop a respectable outside shot - not sure how long that will take, and if Lebron's window will still be open when it happens.
Also not sure about Lebron teaching Wiggins to play defense. Lebron doesn't seem to be the greatest "mentor" type, and he doesn't have the greatest defensive effort levels either.
It's certainly interesting to think about how things might have been if Wiggins stuck around, but as much as we all love to criticise Love (myself included), the Cavs would have had a REALLY weak frontcourt if they never had him there. Who would they have started, Thompson and Mosgov? Does that frontcourt even work over an 82 game season and a 7 game series? I'm not too sure.
Guess we'll never know!