Spolestra was an excellent coach, got three franchise players to embrace playing together and rolled all the way to four straight appearances in the finals. I think something that was overlooked in the summer was how valuable the stable management of Miami was to make the Big Three work. Spoelstra had been apart of the organization for a long time, and new what he wanted to run and what he needed to do to run it. He had the backing of one of the most respected basketball minds ever, and stable ownership with Mickey Arison. Cleveland doesn't have any of those three things, and you can tell how it is effecting them. That Windhorst story was full of weird things like "LeBron just announces he is going to play point guard whenever he wants too," and "Blatt will call one play on the sideline, and LeBron will call a different one on the floor." You didn't hear that kind of stuff coming from Miami.