this. and if he stayed in cleveland, pretty much for the rest of his career he would be stuck with a bunch of old, washed up stars coming to play for cheap, which is never going to be enough to win consistently. generally, when some kind of megastar begins a career somewhere, the team they land on has one of three benefits. 1) they have sucked for a while, and have had several nice draft picks to all grow to s om together, 2) they already had a star on the team, or 3) they have good management to trade the good pieces they had at the time, for better. The Bulls got MJ and Pippen through the draft. The Spurs added Timmy to D-Rob and drafted well. The Lakers added Kobe to Shaq. The Rockets consistently made moves to keep Olajuwon surrounded. The Mavericks consistently made moves to keep talent around Dirk. Even in KDs case, he was drafted with Westbrook and Harden.
Lebron didn't really have any of those benefits. Boozer was pretty much their only hope, but he ended up screwing the Cavs over and bolting, and from then on, Lebron was pretty much surrounded by crap. The best two players they managed to have around him were Larry Hughes and Mo Williams. He stayed for 7 years, made it clear he needed some help yet didn't publicly whine and the way guys like Kobe did, never asked for a trade or anything. He signed an extension, lived his contract out, and left when it was clear that ownership was content with merely being a hot ticket across the NBA, as opposed to doing everything in their power to help win a championship. Even took his time in FA to see if they were going to make any serious attempts to make a big signing or a deal to bring in some talent. When the best they did was fire Mike Brown and hire Byron Scott, I think he finally had enough.
He didn't have to leave the way he did by creating such a spectacle (which he admitted himself he was wrong for that and would do it differently if he had another chance), but its not like he didn't give the Cavaliers more than enough chances to provide him with what he needed.

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. He stayed for 7 years, made it clear he needed some help yet didn't publicly whine and the way guys like Kobe did, never asked for a trade or anything. He signed an extension, lived his contract out, and left when it was clear that ownership was content with merely being a hot ticket across the NBA, as opposed to doing everything in their power to help win a championship. Even took his time in FA to see if they were going to make any serious attempts to make a big signing or a deal to bring in some talent. When the best they did was fire Mike Brown and hire Byron Scott, I think he finally had enough.

