After game 5 in the Heat/Pacers series, won by Miami 90 to 79, Lebron made the following statement, “I kind of went back to my Cleveland days at that point….” The fact of the matter is, Lebron spent much of the last year in Cleveland mode for the Heat, and that’s not what he came there for. When he made the above statement, Lebron was averaging 28.4 points per game for the Heat, D. Wade 15.4, and Chris Bosh 12.6. Pat Riley’s message about having the “guts” to stick it out was being sent to a guy laboring to carry that team, sixth highest minutes on average in the entire NBA, and not the highest paid player. Accordingly, the message back to Pat Riley, improve the team and give me a max contract, was a perfectly reasonable one. The Heat didn’t hand Lebron 4 finals and 2 championships; he worked for them, carrying the greatest load start to finish.
So now, Cleveland emerges as a real consideration. Certainly Lebron’s popularity, reputation, and legacy would be enhanced by a return to Cleveland. Further, you couldn’t criticize him for “trophy chasing”, as the Cavs don’t have all the pieces in place to be called a super team. But compare the Cavs to the Heat’s roster. Kyrie Irving and Andrew Wiggins are if nothing else young stars with fresh legs. That cannot be said of Wade and Bosh. There is also more flexibility to fill out the roster there, and more young legs already in position. That begs the question, why would Lebron favor the Heat over a trip back home to Ohio?
The Heat can pay him more money, and their organization needs to buy time to enhance the roster. Accordingly, a two year deal at the maximum salary, with a player option after the first year, and some nifty maneuvering during that first year to entice optimism would be key to any Heat initiative to retain Lebron James. He owes them nothing.