Chicago Sun-Times

LeBron is new goat standard

You want Jordan to take the last shot, but if you want to build a franchise, you take thebes tall-around player

- BY JOE COWLEY jcowley@suntimes.com @JCowleyHoo­ps

You want your “damn respect,’’ King James? You got it. The perennial GOAT argument has gotten beyond stale, and it was seemingly over after the Michael Jordan defense team offered up the “LastDance’’ documentar­y as the final piece of evidencemo­nths ago, power-walking out of the courtroom as if the case had been won. But, as he has always done, LeBron James continues to blur the debate. If there was one major take to come out of the Orlando “bubble’’ and the eventual Lakers championsh­ip, it was that while Jordan remains the undisputed late-game scoring assassin of all time, the crown as the greatest allaround basketball player the NBA has ever seen fits snugly on James’ head.

It’s not about the 4-6 Finals record for James. The Jordan acolytes love to throw his 6-for-6mark out there as theirmic drop. Well, then that disqualifi­es Tom Brady as the NFL’s GOAT with his less-than-perfect 6-3 Super Bowl record. Terry Bradshaw and Joe Montana each went 4-0 in their Super Bowls.

Perfection doesn’t make you the GOAT. But winning championsh­ips with three franchises, completely new sets of teammates and three different coaches and styles of play? Now there’s your greatness.

Selflessne­ss also can’t be ignored in the GOAT argument. Yes, Jordan had the greatest Robin in league history in Scottie Pippen and worked under the same Hall of Fame coach in Phil Jackson and his triangle offense, but it was all about Jordan in the end.

He wanted the last shot, he wanted his brand to be the best and hemade suremost of his teammates understood he was the alpha.

James always has been about lifting everyone around him, even in his high school days. He empowers teammates to take critical shots, he turns a Daniel “Boobie’’ Gibson into the second-best player on an Eastern Conference championsh­ip team and he can play any style that is asked of him.

But James’ greatness doesn’t end on the court.

No individual in any sport has empowered fellow players like James. No player has been bold enough to speak out on social issues— brand be damned— like James.

There is a mental toughness that comes with selflessne­ss. The Orlando bubble demonstrat­ed that. By Day 20, players were complainin­g about battling depression and playing poorly as a result. James and the Lakers spent nearly 100 days there before the confetti fell Sunday night.

His play was spectacula­r; his voice on what was happening in the outside world was powerful.

Whom do you want taking the last shot in the last seconds of a deciding game? Jordan. Never a debate. Whom do you want to be the first building piece of any NBA franchise? James . . . the GOAT.

Here are four more takeaways now that the Orlando bubble has been emptied, scrubbed and cleaned:

† Forget about the old Bulls regime never fully understand­ing Jimmy Butler’s talent. The bigger sin is it didn’t understand how to embrace his leadership style.

Butler’s younger teammates in Miami flocked to his tough-love mentality, but the younger players with the Bulls cried to management when they were called out.

The response? Punish the messenger rather than support the message. The Finals vividly reminded us of Butler’s basketball talent, but they also showed just how soft the Bulls were as an organizati­on before the swamp was drained this year.

† MVP Giannis Antetokoun­mpo wants a title and knows it won’t be with the Bucks. While the Heat and Mavericks have already been back-channeling their way into the discussion as possible landing places, the Bulls need to be on the phone offering up Zach LaVine, the No. 4 pick in next month’s draft and Lauri Markkanen or Wendell Carter Jr. ASAP.

† Adam Silver is by far better at his job than any other commission­er running a major sport.

† The impressive showing by the Nuggets should serve notice to all Bulls fans — a return to deep playoff runs is coming under executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas.

Trust the process.

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS/AP ?? Lakers superstar LeBron James has now won NBA championsh­ips with three franchises and has made a compelling case to be considered the greatest all-around player in league history.
ASHLEY LANDIS/AP Lakers superstar LeBron James has now won NBA championsh­ips with three franchises and has made a compelling case to be considered the greatest all-around player in league history.
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 ?? JEFF HAYNES/GETTY IMAGES ?? Michael Jordan became a legend thanks to his heroics in the clutch, and he remains the undisputed late-game scoring assassin of all time.
JEFF HAYNES/GETTY IMAGES Michael Jordan became a legend thanks to his heroics in the clutch, and he remains the undisputed late-game scoring assassin of all time.
 ?? KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES ?? The old Bulls regime never fully grasped Jimmy Butler’s talent or his leadership style.
KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES The old Bulls regime never fully grasped Jimmy Butler’s talent or his leadership style.
 ??  ?? Zach LaVine
Zach LaVine

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