see, i think you're wrong here. you don't have to be a top 5 player in the nba to make your teammates better. it certainly helps. webber's talent, skillset, and ability to take over a game single handedly was a wonderful thing to watch, but that was not the reason he made his teammates better. his desire, intensity, passion, fire, whatever you wanna call it...that was what made the team better. if we were to juxtapose a webber game and a rahim game in which both players put up similarly stat-filled numbers, i guarantee that it would be webber that had the greater impact.
it is not simply a matter of being a 20-10 player. 20-10 means nothing if it goes up on the board unnoticed. webber knew how to make a statement, put a stamp on a pass or a dunk or a board. his "swagger" which many of us hold dear in our hearts was something that carried the team and made them better. did you notice how flat the kings looked last night, despite miller's 36? miller doesn't make his teammates better. you're right about how the ability to make a perfect pass doesn't necessarily constitute "making people better." miller's 36 were great, but they were quiet and did little to change the pace or flow of the game. his defense doesn't change games, and his offense doesn't change games.
a guy like vlade divac, on the other hand, makes his teammates better. he was old, slow, could hardly defend to save his life, labored with every leap, smoked more than a pack a day, but still managed to make his teammates better with his lockerroon presence, his passion, his friendship, and his desire to win. that's the mark of a leader and a player who can make his teammates better without the superstar level talent.