I am a european fan as well and I do appreciate team basketball. However, I have also realised that NBA is a completely different ball game. Quite simply, the NBA is a star driven system that has proven to win over and over and over again.
The recent Detroit model was an exception to the rule, it is NOT the rule. The Kings of late 90s and early 00s have not won it all. Yet on the other hand, the NBA history is littered with teams that have won with a star based system. Even the Kings version of team ball was based on a superstar and the only way they could have won it all was for that superstar to carry them over the line.
Now we can all have this fantasy that we can apply the european model to the NBA and it will work. It won't on a regular basis. It might get you to the play offs but it will not take you all the way.
The proven formula of success in the NBA is a superstar based system. You might not prefer the Lakers model but do take a quick look through the NBA history and tell us how many flags the Lakers have won with the superstar model. Then look for the rest of the teams that have won it based on the team model. You will find that the history is on Bricklayer's side in this case.
And quite frankly, I don't think anyone rational would give a rat's tossbag about how we win the championship as long as we win one. But in reality, you are building to challenge for a championship, there is a proven blueprint to follow and the european team concept is not that model.
I am not opposed to superstars. Nor do I think the NBA should suddenly switch to the European model. European is a different game with different rules and it fits the mentality of players who grew up there.
So, I certainly don't think that the Kings should trade Tyreke. I also don't think it would be wise of the Lakers to get rid of Kobe, and the Cavs should probably think twice before they let go of LeBron.
I do, however, think that it would be beneficial to a team with a superstar to have that superstar play within a team frame. MJ was the best player in basketball pretty much since he set foot in the NBA. Still, it took him seven years to win his first ring because he needed to learn that he can't win it alone, even if he is Michael Jordan. One of the things I like about LeBron is that he is basically spending the entire regular season trying to involve his teammates as much as possible to get them to a place where they could help him win in the playoffs. He knows too that he can't do it alone.
There are many benefits to having a superstar, but putting that superstar on a pedestal so far above the rest of the other players inevitably leads to those players feel like replaceable "pieces", making them assume less responsibility in the frame of the game. I don't think that any of those teams who won championships with their superstar had so many posessions where the four other players just stood around waiting for him to do his thing like the Kings had with Tyreke this season. I don't believe that this kind of basketball can ever bring a team to title contention.
In the overtime loss to the Lakers, the Kings made a huge run and built up a 7 point lead, which was erased upon Tyreke's return. Is that because he is a bad or selfish player? Of course not. But in the current system, Tyreke isn't asked to fit into what works for the team. The team has to adapt to him. He went in, slowed down the pace, we lost the momentum, and the rest is history.
When he was out with an ankle injury, the Kings played some great team basketball. The question is - why can't he use his talent to fit in with that kind of team play? I mean, superstars have achieved their status because they are great players, so wouldn't it make sense for a superstar, especially if he is the Point Guard (the guy who is supposed to run the offense of the entire TEAM), adopt a style that would play to the strengths of their teammates?
Like I said, Tyreke is by far the best player on this team, but with this status should come responsibility. Just like he gets well deserved praise for the many good things he does, he should be subject to criticism for bad habits.