Sometimes, super teams aren't all they're cracked up to be.

You look at the roster on paper, and wonder how a team isn't going to win multiple championships but then, before you know it, the team is breaking up.

If the Boston Celtics in 2008 were the first super team of this modern era, they only one won championship. LeBron James' Miami Heat went to four straight NBA Finals and won two of them. The Los Angeles Lakers with Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard, Steve Nash and Pau Gasol were complete failures.

Up next: the Golden State Warriors and Kevin Durant.

San Antonio Spurs legend David Robinson is already warning the Warriors about counting their chickens before they hatch.

Via Complex Sports:

“It takes time, you look at what happened with LeBron, Wade and Bosh. It took them a year or two to get their legs underneath them and figure things out and even then that run was relatively short,” he mentioned. “So if you're able to put together a team like this, you're generally going to have a short window because you can't pay all those guys to keep them together. There's the short window that's going to end relatively quickly and it's not as easy as going out to play.”

Robinson has a point. Keeping this kind of talent together long-term can be very difficult. It requires sacrifice from multiple parties and a good deal of luck.

The Warriors don't seem destined for failure like that Lakers team, but it would also be unfair to immediately assume they're going to match what LeBron did in Miami. Although, this is a 73-win team adding Kevin Durant. Kind of unprecedented territory here.

Durant seems like he should seamlessly fit in with the rest of the Warriors, but you never really know until the season begins. It will probably take some time, but it's hard to imagine it not working out.