You cannot be serious. You think that Chris Bosh was a franchise-changer in Toronto? They made the playoffs twice in the seven years he was there, and never got out of the first round... hell, they went further than that, just two seasons before he got there: they were, literally, a missed jumper away from the Eastern Conference Finals in 2001, and they made it back to the playoffs in 2002, then Vince Carter got hurt, and they got Chris Bosh in 2003. And, during Bosh's first three years in Toronto, they didn't sniff the playoffs. Yeah, he sure changed the hell out of that franchise.
Carmelo Anthony's entire legacy is empty numbers. All of the pro-tanking people talk about going all-in for a guy who can help be the cornerstone of a championship contender, instead of trying to win now, and be a perennial "first round and out" team. Well, if your ambition is to be a FRAO team, then Anthony is definitely the man to call. If he's a franchise-changer, then I guess that Gilbert Arenas is, too. Brought Denver back to "being a force to be reckoned with"? That's rich. They were about as much a force to be reckoned with as the Atlanta Hawks, except the Hawks are actually good for at least two wins at home.
James and Wade were the only two "franchise changers" to come out of that draft. Now, Denver did sell a bunch of #15 jerseys when Anthony was playing there, so I guess they had that going for them, but it's an insult to even put him in the same conversation, let alone the same category.