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King James - LOSER!

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  • King James - LOSER!

    King James left the playoffs as a loser

    By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports Jun 1, 3:20 pm EDT


    I’m a winner, King James proclaimed. So, there you go. That’s his reason for rushing out of the conference finals without so much as a nod to Dwight Howard(notes) and the Orlando Magic. That’s his reason for marching to the bus and letting the Cleveland Cavaliers’ spare parts take care of his responsibilities in the interview room.
    Funny, but James stayed on the court to make sure the Detroit Pistons and Atlanta Hawks paid respect to him. As it turns out, there’s one thing allowed to happen at the end of a playoff series: Everyone bows down and kisses the King’s ring. Only, LeBron doesn’t have a ring. He’s never won a game in the NBA Finals.
    So, yes, maybe they just have to kiss his feet.

    “It’s not being a poor sport or anything like that,” James said.
    No, nothing like that. Yes, James cares so much that it isn’t possible to be gracious and humbled.
    You know me, he told the reporters in Cleveland on Sunday. I’m a competitor. “If somebody beats you up, you’re not going to congratulate them,” James said. “It doesn’t make sense for me to go over and shake somebody’s hand.”
    Here’s the question: Who has the guts to tell him that he sounds like an immature, self-absorbed brat?

    Here’s the problem for the Cavaliers and James: No one.
    It won’t be Cleveland Cavaliers ownership, front office and coaches. It won’t be the NBA. It won’t be Nike. And it sure won’t be those childhood sycophants who surround James and tell everyone what a brilliant businessman LeBron is because they can answer the phone when corporations call for a famous pitchman.

    LeBron doesn’t want to win more than Michael Jordan did, but Jordan could stop and shake a winner’s hand. Magic Johnson and Larry Bird could, too. Julius Erving did. Kobe Bryant(notes). Isiah Thomas led a walkout after losing to the Chicago Bulls after winning two NBA titles, but Joe Dumars never followed him. He stayed and shook Jordan’s hand, the way Jordan had always shook his when the Pistons had beaten him.
    “M.J. had stopped, shook my hand and hugged me three straight years that we had beaten them in the playoffs,” Dumars once told me. “There was no way I was walking off the court without shaking the Bulls’ hands.”
    Within the Cavs, someone needed to tell James that he embarrassed himself and the franchise, but that won’t happen. They’re too scared of him. Most league executives with knowledge of Cleveland’s operation believe it’s far more of an ownership issue, than basketball operations.
    If general manager Danny Ferry and coach Mike Brown privately disdain the ridiculous posing for pictures that James started with his teammates on a 13-game winning streak, the owner is believed to see the foolishness as a marketing dream.
    Someone should’ve told James that the pregame Polaroid act was belittling and beneath a championship contender, but it never happened.
    All season, the Cavaliers acted too entitled, too arrogant for a team that’s won nothing. They ran out demanding that Mo Williams(notes) be made an All-Star, when the truth bore itself out in the playoffs: Cleveland has one All-Star. Nevertheless, Williams still embarrassed the Cavs with foolish proclamations and guarantees his middling talent couldn’t deliver.
    “If you believe in karma with that nonsense,” one Western Conference executive said, “then Cleveland got what was coming to them.”

    The Cavaliers are terrified of James. When you’re around them, it’s sometimes embarrassing to watch the way they tip-toe and grovel with him. In their defense, that’s how James wants it. As a childhood prodigy, that’s all LeBron’s ever known. The Cavs are at his mercy until he becomes a free agent in July of 2010, and that isn’t going to change. There’s no chance that he signs an extension this summer, because that would be the end of the drama, the intrigue and LeBron James(notes) isn’t letting that go away.
    Now, Ferry goes back to the phones and starts work on surrounding James with championship talent. Cleveland is sure to revisit the Shaquille O’Neal(notes) talks with the Phoenix Suns, and James and his associates will send out word that, hey, we’ll go to New York unless the Cavs deliver him his title. Well, they’ve reached the NBA Finals and had the best record in the NBA within the past three seasons, so they must have surrounded James with something that works there.

    Nevertheless, James distanced himself in losing again, after a season in which he sold himself as all for one, and one for all. James had been an MVP until the very final moments of the basketball season, and then, he embarrassed himself and acted like a petulant kid. In a world where everyone in his life is too fearful or too dependent, LeBron James goes into the summer believing his own nonsense that he walked out of this season a winner.

    As usual, there’s no one to tell him.
    Except maybe now, Kobe’s puppet.


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

  • #2
    he IS a BIG kid.....he went form high school to the pros...some level of maturity has been retarded IMHO.

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Gamma View Post
      he IS a BIG kid.....he went form high school to the pros...some level of maturity has been retarded IMHO.
      For years I have only watch the NBA in fits and starts - (I was drained after watching my beloved Knicks of Ewing, Starks, Oakley and the rest come so close and yet never got over the hump...and then on the retiring of those warriors the painful franchise slump) - but I returned to watch these play-offs for the right to contest the finals.

      James is not as good as the media hype. He is when compared to those players of those Bird, Magic and Jordan, Ewing years an ordinary player. Not the pits...but ordinary. Those guys would when in his same position of losing games...would change the way they played/carried the team. Those past greats would think it out. You would see them solving problems. If the outside shot was not working, they went to driving to the basket. If they were being doubled, they became passers. If the team was static, they encouraged and worked on rotation, spacing and getting the ball into the hands of the open man.

      Who remembers Bird, Magic, Ewing, Jordan playing the TEAM/no ego game ...winning games by getting the ball to others for the winning shot as they drew the double and tripple teams? Aaaaah Jordan killing my Knicks with Hodges sinking the winning 3. ...or Pippin doing his thing....not to say Jordan did not at times put in the dagger!

      James?
      Over-rated! Over-hyped!
      ...at least that is what I saw in his Conference Final games!
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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      • #4
        No, Karl. James is good, very good! And he plays TEAM basketball! He's just silly about not congratulating opponents.


        BLACK LIVES MATTER

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Karl View Post
          James is not as good as the media hype. He is when compared to those players of those Bird, Magic and Jordan, Ewing years an ordinary player. Not the pits...but ordinary.
          who are you kidding... i cannot believe that someone would actually write what you just did...

          petulant, immature in this decison to walk away and not congratulating the winning team... you would be in the right to say all that and more...

          over-rated, over-hyped... anti-team... no... dat nuh come inna de discussion about lebron...
          'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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          • #6
            Lebron is a very good player, and indeed I expect him to be among the greats by the time his playing days are over. He is not as spectacular as a Jordan or Kobe, more in the mold of a Magic but he is as complete a player as you will find.

            Remembering the exploits of past great players is a tricky thing. Most people forget (or don't know) that it took Jordan quite a number of years (5 or 6 I think) before he won his first title, and that only happened when he had a good supporting cast. Cleveland has yet to do that with Lebron.

            Regarding this incident, his lame explanation bothered me a lot more than what he did initially. He should have just said he was really disapointed at the time and would do diifferently if he had to do it again. He let me down with that, but overall I still think that as superstars go he is one of the more grounded ones.
            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
              No, Karl. James is good, very good! And he plays TEAM basketball! He's just silly about not congratulating opponents.
              tenk yuh sah... iz wha karl a watch... yuh cannot find anybody who know anyting bout basketball who wudda have problems wid lebron game...
              'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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              • #8
                I don't agree, he is not the only one who made the transition early, as one blog I read pointed out, he stayed behind on the curt at the end of the previous two series and accepted congratulations from the other two teams they swept.

                As a student of the game he must know how the real stars like Magic, Michael and Larry acted whne they lost series as well.

                The sad part is no one in the Cavalier organisation or the NBA has the balls to tell him he was wrong.
                Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                Che Guevara.

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                • #9
                  Go back to watching football Karl, this kid is very good and with the right cast (ie Boston Celtics) could be great
                  Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                  Che Guevara.

                  Comment

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