Wait, what?
I'm not moving any goalposts, I'm just explaining to you on how important context is. I'm not acting like LeBron didn't handpick his teammates - I'm talking about his first stint in Cleveland - not Miami, or his first season back with the Cavs. Bird was fortunate in that he was on a team with actual talent; players who could carry the scoring load and sometimes averaged more ppg than he did during the postseason. Look at the difference in starting help between the two players during the playoffs -
Bird could depend on his teammates to carry the load - can't say the same about LeBron's.
LeBron with those Celtics squads would probably win five rings, and would be looked at entirely differently to what he's looked at today.
Why are you speaking as if Draymond isn't the best defender in the league, Iggy isn't one of the best wing defenders and the Warriors weren't the best defensive team last season? Why are you speaking as if he wanted Shumpert and JR to be his two main scoring options (and not Love and Kyrie who were both injured)?
It'd be like McHale going to the Finals against the Lakers without D.J. and Parish - do you think he would've beaten them without those two players?
Wait, what?
LeBron has plenty of plays that define his career - the problem is they won't be put on loop (to ingrain in our minds) until he's retired, as he's still writing his story. We'll all start reminiscing about what he did during his career and all his
moments when they keep replaying them over and over again, when he's out of the game. You only look at Bird in this way (as every other single past great) because he's no longer playing, and the only way to remember him is through moments where he was at his best. Even moments that at the time probably weren't that special, but through sports romanticism and suggestibility are now perceived as being
special.
If his argument is stats, surely you must entertain the possibility that at least some of those stats were career-defining moments -
He's had the same number of game winning shots as Jordan in the playoffs, and more go-ahead baskets in the final seconds of playoff games than ANYBODY in the last 15 year and you're telling me he doesn't have any plays that define his career?
What the hell do you mean stats only go so far? How does Kobe's 3-point record in a game relate to LeBron's stats?