Let's get to the bottom line of last night's game: TURNOVERS. When you turn the ball over and give the other team easy looks, you can't complain; you got what you *DESERVED*.
And who was leading the way with those turnovers? *LEBRON*.
The turnovers that I saw (and things that should have gone as turnovers but went as rebounds) were because LeBron had gone into full-blown "bad-Kobe" mode. He tried to do it all himself, and the Celtics defense was waiting for that moment. You don't beat Boston by challenging Garnett to play defense in the lane. You don't beat Boston by trying to go one-on-one against them. What is the result of that going to be? TURNOVERS. What was the result of that last night? TURNOVERS. What will it be if anyone employs this strategy? TURNOVERS.
If this was Kobe, we'd be blasting him for it. And we'd be right to. Sorry, LeBron, but this one's on you.
For the longest time, LeBron has focused on getting production out of teammates. Last night, it was teammates focusing on getting production out of LeBron. The former makes Cleveland a good team. The latter makes them the 2005 Lakers.
Great numbers do not excuse the SELFISH, I-CAN-DO-IT-ALL-BY-MYSELF play that LeBron engaged in during the fourth quarter. Over and over, basketball proves, NO, you can't do it all by yourself. Cleveland is not talented enough to overcome LeBron engaging in the failed emulation of Jordan's, Kobe's, Iverson's, or whatever other player you want to pick's shameless self-promotion. I can even point to the '97 Finals version of Karl Malone, when he decide to prove to every skeptic that he could shoot from the outside. It's wrong-minded thinking, and unless your team has the talent to overcome the misbehavior of it's star, then you're going to lose. Some teams have enough talent to overcome that, but most don't.
When you see 9 turnovers, that's a number you have to explain - you can't just overlook it. Desperation might excuse a few, but *9*? No way.
I say LeBron got what he deserved based on how he tried to play.