Tracy
McGrady established his Basketball Hall of Fame credentials with the Orlando
Magic. Yet, his Playoff failures with the Magic continue to define his legacy.
The
modern-day NBA superstar has changed their ways.
The NBA
used to be a league where the best went against the best. But now the best
players are teaming up with the best. Or, at least, doing so more openly. Now
superstars recruit superstars to create super teams.
But in
Tracy McGrady’s era in the early 2000s, most superstars wanted to compete
against other superstars.
Still,
success in the NBA is judged on stars. Throughout the league’s history, players
have congregated on the same team by chance or not. The league is defined by
mega teams like the Hall-of-Famer-loaded Boston Celtics of the 1960s and 1980s.
Or the Showtime Los Angeles Lakers.
How many
NBA players have won a championship without another certified Hall of Fame
level talent on the roster? The 2011 Dallas Mavericks with Dirk Nowitzki and
Rick Carlisle‘s brilliant use of a zone defense to reduce LeBron James to a
role player and the 2004 Detroit Pistons stand out as the only outliers.
There are
not many. And one of the many stars who toiled alone was McGrady, a prolific
scorer who never had enough help.
It was not
supposed to be that way, of course. McGrady joined the Magic in the summer of
2000 as part of a grand plan to attract three mega free agents in the same
summer. Orlando struck out on Tim Duncan but still signed a perennial All Star
in Grant Hill.
Even adding
Grant Hill was nowhere near enough. Injuries kept Hill from playing any
significant time — just 47 games in four seasons with McGrady — and left a
heavy burden for McGrady. A burden the Magic never lifted.
Throughout
McGrady’s tenure with the Magic from 2000-04, the organization failed to put
the necessary pieces to complement his skill set and take the team to a
championship level. Or even put them in position to advance out of the first
round of the Playoffs.
McGrady
never had the supporting cast he needed to make it. And it damaged the
reputation of the seven time NBA All-Star and Hall of Famer.
While Kobe
Bryant had Shaquille O’Neal and Phil Jackson, and Tim Duncan had Manu Ginobili
and Tony Parker, Tracy McGrady shared the court with Darrell Armstrong and Mike
Miller. They were not bad players in their own right, but they are clearly not
on the same level. Hill’s absence was evident.
It proves
basketball is a team game no matter how good an individual may be. During
McGrady’s time in Orlando, he was one of the top five players in the NBA. Some
critics believed he was better than Bryant. McGrady was a consensus top player
in the league — a two-time All-NBA First Team player and a four-time All-Star
starter with the Magic — and yet could not experience Playoff success.
McGrady by
his mere presence made the Magic relevant and a Playoff team in a weakened
Eastern Conference. But he was never enough alone to win on his own.
Which is
what happens when you are a superstar type of talent on a team without a
legitimate supporting cast. It is similar to the reason why LeBron James went
to the Miami Heat to team up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. That was likely
the plan when McGrady originally arrived before Hill’s injury derailed
everything. Imagine McGrady with a supporting cast of players comparable to
Wade and Bosh. Maybe we would be speaking about T-Mac with a different type of
tone.
Imagine
McGrady with a supporting cast of players comparable to Wade and Bosh. Maybe we
would be speaking about T-Mac with a different type of tone.
Imagine
McGrady playing full-time with Hill — McGrady averaged 27.8 points per game and
Hill averaged 14.9 points per game in 43 games together as the team went 20-23.
A lot of this is with Hill at half speed. He still would have been a star. Just
one without such a heavy burden.
Maybe if
McGrady had an All-Star level Hill with him for more than half a season over
three years, we would be speaking about McGrady with a different type of tone.
But
injuries are a part of the game, and McGrady was not a LeBron James-type of
talent who could will his team to the Finals, despite the injuries to key
players on the roster.
The
organization had good intentions of putting quality stars around McGrady and
nearly landed Duncan. Making attempts like acquiring Duncan could have changed
the landscape of the franchise and took pressure off of McGrady, especially as
he matured. He became a star carrying this heavy burden.
That dream
of a “big three” with McGrady, Duncan and Hill was a long shot from happening.
But if it would have gone through, and if Hill could have stayed healthy,
Orlando would have been one of the best teams in the East. They would have
competed against the New Jersey Nets of that era and the Los Angeles Lakers
every year in the Finals during Los Angeles’ three peat.
McGrady put
up incredible individual numbers. But it never translated.
Although
McGrady led the team with 42 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in Game
Three of the first round matchup against the Milwaukee Bucks in 2001, the Magic
still lost in four games. McGrady’s superhuman efforts in that series — 33.8
points, 6.5 rebounds and 8.3 assists per game — were nowhere near enough to
take down the trio of Ray Allen, Glenn Robinson and Sam Cassell.
Orlando
never was better than a fifth seed in the Eastern Conference with McGrady. And
his Playoff performances were the best the Magic have ever seen. The success
was ultimately not there.
Orlando had
Mike Miller, a former Rookie of the Year, and Darrell Armstrong working as
Tracy McGrady’s regular running mates. They were solid, but not spectacular
players. Orlando never could find the right mix around him — trotting out
near-retirement Horace Grant and Patrick Ewing to play center and a far
overweight Shawn Kemp too. The team never found the right role players to
accentuate McGrady.
They just
expected McGrady to carry the load.
Although
Orlando had good intentions of putting a supporting cast around McGrady, good
intentions do not win championships. Good “healthy” players do.
And
everyone is left to wonder what could have been with McGrady.
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario