The only reason the star driven teams win most of the rings is because it's Stern's league. The Kings team that everyone knows was amazing to watch, but ultimately it did not fit Stern's plan. I hope for the day that either Stern retires and a new way of thinking gets in charge of the NBA or the day Stern gets exposed and is forced to step down.
I think it is interesting to be a Phoenix fan right now, knowing your team isn't built in a way that will get the love from outside forces that is needed to win rings but that you get to go to a ball game and see good basketball. Compare that to being a Cavs fan, and having an excellent all around freak in Lebron James, who can make great passes and finishes, but who exists in one of the ugliest offenses in the league just because it suits the sort of game which allows Superstars to get calls/control outcomes. The Cavs, outside of James, are an ugly *** product and their style even nullifies some of what made James more compared to Magic than MJ at the start.
At a certain point, the league had its stars and its good ball. Jordan and Stern changed all that, and it can be argued that Stern changed that because ratings and interest and revenue were declining at the moment. The same thing is happening now, but I don't think Stern will be willing to change his Superstar model yet.
For the Kings success vis a vis the Superstar model, there are a few hurdles. Namely, that you don't see superstars on smaller markets getting rings often. Second, Tyreke isn't a showtime dunker and highlight guy, and that image is part of what Stern wants to sell. Third, the history of the Webber and Divac era ended in what has become a big black eye for the league's credibility. To bring Sacramento back into the spotlight is to invite comparisons and talk of that team, essentially drudging up a past that Stern would rather be forgotten.
Can the Kings and Tyreke overcome the business side of the NBA to win rings? I'm not sure. Can they bring in extra stars to a small market? If Tyreke ends up a Gilbert Arenas more than a DWade then I doubt it. Even though players understand Phoenix isn't aiming for rings, they still come just to enjoy playing. It was hard for the Lakers to lure Free Agents with Kobe. just due to Kobe's playstyle alienating others. Hell, not everybody wanted to play with MJ either.
An interesting experiment is sure to come.
That's all semi-well thought out, and also unfortunately mostly baloney.
Here is why the superstar model works, and its got nothing to do with Stern or favorites or anythng other than basketball dynamics.
1) first, obviously there are two sides of the ball, offense and defense, as there is in virtually every sport. The critical difference between the sides of the ball is this:
2a) on offense, you are limited becasue there is only a single ball. Only one offensive player can play with the ball at a time. This is however also a big advantage -- it means that if you have 1 or 2 dominant offensive players you can keep forcing the ball to them, and the other players do not need to be as skilled. You are in control.
2b) defense is the opposite -- the opposing team controls where it attacks, so you need as many good defensive players over there as you can get, since any one of them may be attacked on any possession. If you have a weak defender out there, the opposing team can focus its attack on them.
here is how that comes together:
3) the problem is that many, or even most, defensive specialist type players lack offensive skill, just as many, if not most, offensive players lack defensive skill. Obviously players that have both are actually star level guys.
4) so, you need as many defensive guys you can get on the floor in order to play top defense, because of the 2b siutation (i.e. because opposing offenses can attack any one of them). But if you put defensive specialists all over the floor, you can't score anymore. Your option is to put in offensive players all over the floor, but then of course your defense suffers.
5) enter the superstar. Because of 2a, that is because there is only one ball on offense and you control who it goes to, one highly skilled offensive player can in fact dominate a basketball game by himself. You keep sending the ball to him, and if he is a superstar level guy, either his man can't guard him, or they double him or trap him or otherwise run extra people at him, which leaves others open, and allows less talented teammates open looks to score.
6) so what does that do? Well because you have this one dominant offensive player, all of a sudden you can afford to put defensive specialists on the floor (typically armed with a limited aresenal, often a standstill three point shot), because the one dominant offensive player takes care of the offense for you. In essense he "buys" you roleplayers/defensive specialists.
7) so now your superstar takes care of the offense, the defensive roleplayers take care of the defense (aided by the superstar -- one of their key traits is they are strong on both ends), and you are set to be a top team.
8) meanwhile teams without superstars are caught in a zero sum situation where they can't have both offense and defense at the same time. They have to choose. To get enough offense they have to put offensive players at every position, but then their defense sucks. Or they can play it the other way, throw all defensive personnel out there, but without a superstar to pick up the scoring burden, they can't score. Either way they are between a rock and a hard place.
9) Cleveland's offense
is ugly. But what you are missing is that the offense is not the point. What they have "bought" with LeBron is defense, defense, and more defense. And LeBron's job is just to try to keep them scoring enoguh that the defense will carry them. And as their 52-15 record shows, oh boy does it.