Is the Super Team Concept Dead?: For the First Time In 17 Years, Neither LeBron James Nor Kevin Durant Has Made It to Second Round of NBA Playoffs
What a difference a season makes. With the super team era having its run stunted with teams not making the play-in tournament, let alone the second round of the playoffs, it’s time to say farewell to the NBA super team.
The Brooklyn Nets, the heavily favored NBA team, were swept by the Boston Celtics in the first round.
Kevin Durant (Getty Images)
A few weeks earlier, the Los Angeles Lakers lost to the Phoenix Suns and were eliminated from contending for a spot in the play-in tournament. The Lakers’ 121-110 loss on April 5, paired with a San Antonio Spurs win over the Denver Nuggets, meant the Lakers were out of the playoffs.
Led by the trio of LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Russell Westbrook, the Lakers finished 33-49 with their veteran roster.
Interestingly, it is the first time in 17 years that neither LeBron James or Kevin Durant is in the second round of the playoffs.
The Los Angeles Clippers made it to the play-in tournament but lost after Paul George tested positive for COVID-19.
Three super teams. There are three postseason funerals and a league that is now underwhelmed by its most marketable stars.
Birth Of The Super Team
It is now the fourth time LeBron James has missed the playoffs in his 19-year career; however, it is his second time with the Lakers. The other two times were his first two seasons in Cleveland, in 2003 and 2004.
After planning with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh to team up once they hit free agency, it took James two seasons to win a championship in Miami. He did it back-to-back before returning to Cleveland, where he won it all in 2016.
For Durant, his playoff runs had stretched back to 2010 when he and Russell Westbrook ran the Oklahoma City Thunder into the postseason. After nine seasons with that franchise Durant would head to the Bay Area to join up with Steph Curry and Klay Thompson to finally win his first championship in 2017 in his first season with the Dubs.
Wrong Picks
According to Ernie Johnson on “Inside the NBA” on TNT, in the preseason survey of the NBA general managers, the top two picks to win the championship were the Brooklyn Nets (chosen by 71 percent) and the Los Angeles Lakers (17 percent).
It was primarily based on the depth chart of the two franchises. However, the devil is in the details despite all hype trains about the perceived championship caliber of a team. There was Kyrie Irving’s lack of play after refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine during NYC’s early stringent indoor vaccine mandate.
For more on why super teams might become a thing of the past after the playoff failure of Lebron’s Lakers and KD’s Nets, click here.