The GOAT: "I would not have called Larry and Magic and say let’s play together"

Originally Posted by CP1708


iLLoQuent aka DSK wrote:

I mentioned it in the other thread and Downtown43 expanded on it...him turning down a team like Chicago w/ the pieces they have set up (also considering Mike Miller would have followed wherever LBJ went) spoke volumes to me about his mentality. Where others would have relished the immense challenges a Chicago or NY had to offer...he chose the one HE felt would take the most pressure off him. 'Nuff said.



And now I think it's backfired.  If he don't win in year 1, people will be rallying with pitchforks outside the gym laughin at dude.  So in a way, ALL the pressure is on him now.  And I seen how he does under pressure the last couple postseasons. 
pimp.gif

  
That's what I've been saying....due to Bosh/Wade already being in Miami, there is more pressure on Lebron & Co. to win a title EVERY year that this team is together.  This dude has been vilified to the point where most people want to see him fail.  There would have been pressure for Bron to win titles in Chi, NY, and Cleveland...but he would have had a little more leeway than what he currently has in Miami. 
 
Originally Posted by CP1708


iLLoQuent aka DSK wrote:

I mentioned it in the other thread and Downtown43 expanded on it...him turning down a team like Chicago w/ the pieces they have set up (also considering Mike Miller would have followed wherever LBJ went) spoke volumes to me about his mentality. Where others would have relished the immense challenges a Chicago or NY had to offer...he chose the one HE felt would take the most pressure off him. 'Nuff said.



And now I think it's backfired.  If he don't win in year 1, people will be rallying with pitchforks outside the gym laughin at dude.  So in a way, ALL the pressure is on him now.  And I seen how he does under pressure the last couple postseasons. 
pimp.gif

  

if they lose everyone will be on the beach hanging out the next mourning. No pitchforks and unruly mobs in miami. He doesn't seem to care what his peers think of him anyway.
 
Originally Posted by CP1708


iLLoQuent aka DSK wrote:

I mentioned it in the other thread and Downtown43 expanded on it...him turning down a team like Chicago w/ the pieces they have set up (also considering Mike Miller would have followed wherever LBJ went) spoke volumes to me about his mentality. Where others would have relished the immense challenges a Chicago or NY had to offer...he chose the one HE felt would take the most pressure off him. 'Nuff said.



And now I think it's backfired.  If he don't win in year 1, people will be rallying with pitchforks outside the gym laughin at dude.  So in a way, ALL the pressure is on him now.  And I seen how he does under pressure the last couple postseasons. 
pimp.gif

  

if they lose everyone will be on the beach hanging out the next mourning. No pitchforks and unruly mobs in miami. He doesn't seem to care what his peers think of him anyway.
 
Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest?  

Uhh...yeah...and that's exactly what we're saying.
The dudes with the counter arguments are the ones who are taking that to be a negative thing. I never said ANYTHING was wrong with it.

I'm just saying don't pretend like this ISN'T the situation at hand which is what some people are making it out to be.
 
Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest?  

Uhh...yeah...and that's exactly what we're saying.
The dudes with the counter arguments are the ones who are taking that to be a negative thing. I never said ANYTHING was wrong with it.

I'm just saying don't pretend like this ISN'T the situation at hand which is what some people are making it out to be.
 
Originally Posted by westcoastsfinest


everyone is titled to their own opinion and mike isnt any different
You do understand that some opinions hold more value than others correct?
 
Originally Posted by westcoastsfinest


everyone is titled to their own opinion and mike isnt any different
You do understand that some opinions hold more value than others correct?
 
Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest? Seriously, to some guys that really isn't as important as winning. Maybe his deal is...who cares about the greatest, 
Then why does he call himself the "Chosen One" and the "King"???
 
Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest? Seriously, to some guys that really isn't as important as winning. Maybe his deal is...who cares about the greatest, 
Then why does he call himself the "Chosen One" and the "King"???
 
Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
 
Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
 
I mean I understand where MJs comin from, but Bosh and Wade ain't no Magic and Larry...its still yet to be determined, its just that everyone's expectation for bron's so highh that noone ever could imagine bron would do such thing, he made himself a franchinese player now he's just playin alongside with the franchinese player, maybe to be him 20 years down the road if he owns 10 championships, people will never ever talk about how he jumped ship..who knows but yea its too bad he put himself in such situation, i dont feel sorry for him tho

I want Kobe to kicks his butt & co. for the next 5 seasons at least
 
I mean I understand where MJs comin from, but Bosh and Wade ain't no Magic and Larry...its still yet to be determined, its just that everyone's expectation for bron's so highh that noone ever could imagine bron would do such thing, he made himself a franchinese player now he's just playin alongside with the franchinese player, maybe to be him 20 years down the road if he owns 10 championships, people will never ever talk about how he jumped ship..who knows but yea its too bad he put himself in such situation, i dont feel sorry for him tho

I want Kobe to kicks his butt & co. for the next 5 seasons at least
 
Real talk everybody got their own opinion but how can u defend LeBron. W/e man.......yall don't got the heart of a champ then. It is what it is. I agree with mike an everybody else with the same thinking of LBJ choice.
 
Real talk everybody got their own opinion but how can u defend LeBron. W/e man.......yall don't got the heart of a champ then. It is what it is. I agree with mike an everybody else with the same thinking of LBJ choice.
 
Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
laugh.gif




This might have been posted already but if not, this was another angle from SI.com's Ian Thomsen:


[h1]Weekly Countdown: LeBron's decision could redefine greatness[/h1]Is LeBron still The Man? This was the question being asked by people around the league who accused James of running away from his responsibilities as a franchise leader. Charles Barkley said he was "disappointed" that James chose to "piggyback" onto Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. Magic general manager Otis Smith mocked James for preferring a lesser role with the Heat: "I thought he was more of a competitor. The great ones usually stay in one location."
"The most explosive part of this is that a great player left to go not do it on his own -- and in his prime years. When has that ever happened?" a Western Conference GM told me. "The reason we're hearing so many people react the way they have is because they feel like the sanctity of greatness in the NBA is tarnished.

"It's like one of those movies when the baseball player lets everybody down because he isn't the hero everybody thought he was and they show a kid crying because his hero isn't what he was supposed to be. We all thought LeBron was a leader, and now it's a letdown to think we were all wrong about him."

There are two parts to this story involving James. The first involves the way he announced his decision, for which I criticized him in Sports Illustrated this week. He hurt himself badly by putting the needs of the TV show ahead of his relationships with his hometown fans. The second -- and separate -- issue involves this question of being The Man and whether he couldn't stand the pressure of being that in Cleveland. I'm not sold on the idea that he wanted to be or needs to be The Man -- at least not in the way that others wanted him to be.

• Michael Jordan ruined it for everybody. The biggest impact of Jordan's success in Chicago was his creation of The Man. Before he came along, that title --The Man -- didn't exist in an admirable way. As a matter of fact, if you had someone who saw himself as The Man on your team, you probably weren't going to win the championship.

In the 43 years before Jordan's title breakthrough in 1990, only once had a player ever led the league in scoring while leading his team to the championship. The only time it happened was in 1970-71 when Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (who at that time went by his given name of Lew Alcindor) led the NBA with 31.7 points while carrying the Milwaukee Bucks to their only title. For more than four decades it was a golden rule in the NBA that the highest-scoring players weren't winners. The Celtics lead the NBA with 17 championships, and they've proudly never had a player who led the league in scoring.

In the pre-Jordan years, an NBA player could follow one of two roads: You could be like Wilt Chamberlain, whose scoring average ranged from 33.5 points to 50.4 points over his first seven seasons, but didn't win a championship until his scoring plummeted to 24.1 points as a 30-year-old with the 76ers in 1966-67; or you could be like Bill Russell, who averaged an unimpressive 15.1 points yet led the Celtics to 11 championships in his 13 seasons.

The best players couldn't have it both ways in those days. You were either selfish or selfless, either a prolific scorer or a team player. Even Abdul-Jabbar spent much of his career hearing complaints that he was -- apart from his lone breakthrough with the Bucks -- too self-indulgent to be a dominant winner.

Then along came Jordan to ruin everything. The Bulls won six titles and he was the NBA's No. 1 scorer for every one of those championship seasons. I always thought his legacy did a lot of harm to the NBA by setting an example that his descendants would try and fail to emulate. The NBA has spent the last decade-and-a-half searching for the next Michael Jordan, and it has been a colossally unsuccessful wild goose chase. He was one of a kind, the exception to the rule, and the NBA has made a huge mistake in attempting to hold other players accountable to Jordan's standard.

The confusing example of Jordan enabled Allen Iverson to think he could be a self-absorbed scorer and a champion simultaneously. It also enabled the whole Shaq-and-Kobe fiasco over who should be The Man. It made the NBA unpopular among traditional fans, who saw a generation of young players scoring selfishly in pursuit of salary and celebrity and all the while rationalizing it because, well, wasn't that how Jordan did it?

Through no fault of his own, Jordan was viewed by an entire misguided generation of players who drew the wrong conclusion from his success. They looked up to him and decided, "Greed is good."

Then along came LeBron ...

• LeBron doesn't want to be Jordan. Hasn't this been obvious from the start? When I began hearing about James as a high school underclassman in Ohio, NBA scouts were saying he could have been the No. 1 pick as a 16-year-old sophomore because he was more of a playmaker than a scorer. Of course, he had all of the gifts for scoring, but so do a lot of prodigies in high school; what set apart James was his transcendent vision as a passer whose unselfishness elevated the performances of his less-talented teammates.

Following Cleveland's 79-76 loss to the Pistons in Game 1 of the 2007 Eastern finals, James was second-guessed for passing to Donyell Marshall for a three-pointer (which he missed) instead of taking the ball to the basket himself. One of the arguments held against James was that Jordan would have taken it upon himself to score at the end of the game.

But what if James has never viewed himself as the second coming? What if he never wanted to be the next Jordan?

In this week's SI, I bring up the idea that maybe James wasn't running away from his responsibilities in Cleveland. Maybe instead he went to Miami because he wants to redefine himself on terms of his own choosing. Maybe his only crime against basketball is that he wants to be Magic instead of Michael -- which is no crime at all.

• Wasn't Magic The Man? Of course he was. Magic Johnson played with Abdul-Jabbar and James Worthy, who were both prolific Hall of Fame scorers. I never heard anyone complain that Magic was reneging on his responsibilities as a superstar because he wasn't leading the Lakers in scoring, or because he was distributing the ball to his teammates when a big shot was needed.

I remember just the opposite: Magic and Larry Bird are lauded for saving the NBA because they were passers. The NBA had been known as a me-first league of selfish scorers who pursued their own numbers ahead of team goals. Magic and Larry were saviors because they had the ability to score, but they set aside the pursuit of stats because they wanted to win more than anything. They produced entertaining and beautiful basketball while contributing to something larger than themselves, and people loved them for that.

Jordan's inimitable style was the embodiment of the greedy 1990s -- if Ayn Rand had written about basketball, she would have invented the character of Michael Jordan. But Jordan's success had the unexpected consequence of warping the view of how basketball should be played. He created the standard that all great players should be The Man, and his influence ran deep -- so deep that among those criticizing James for passing up the last shot three years ago was none other than Magic himself.

• A restoration of fundamental values? If LeBron reinvents himself as a more athletic version of Magic, and if the Heat win multiple championships while he's creating plays for Wade and Bosh to finish, is James going to be criticized for his move from Cleveland to Miami? Of course not. I believe he'll be celebrated for sacrificing his scoring numbers in order to take on a role that will ultimately be seen as reviving fluid team play and improving the standards of the NBA.

For those who believe James will never overcome the indignity of his televised announcement last week, just think about how unpopular Kobe Bryant was four years ago and how popular he is today. Everything turned around for him because he won championships. The same will happen for James.

This is a country of front-runners and we value winning above all else. This Miami team is set up to win in the open floor with aggressive defense that liberates James and Wade to push the ball in transition and finish above the rim. Fans are going to love that style of play, and they're going to love seeing James play in the open floor far more often than he did for Cleveland. If the Heat respond by winning in June, James' departure to Miami will be viewed as a visionary move. He'll be lauded for reducing his own stats in order to win championships in the pursuit of beautiful team basketball -- the same standards that made heroes of Magic and Larry and Russell.

The reason James isn't getting the benefit of the doubt for his choice is because he walked out on his home region in a shameful way. He treated his own fans badly, and only time and success can separate him from that disgrace.

I was among those who didn't think James and Wade could play together, but that's because I too was locked into the idea of both players wanting to be leading stars. But if James is the passer and Wade is the finisher -- and both are sharing the ball in transition, as they surely will do -- there's no reason they shouldn't flourish together.

Talent dictates its own terms, especially put to good use. If James is winning in a big way, people will forget the means of his exit and focus on the ends -- the championships and the explosive, fast-breaking style in which they're being won. In the end, he'll be credited with steering the NBA back to its roots while holding future generations to his team-first standard.

Of course, he gets the last laugh only if he wins. He has to win. No kidding.
 
Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
laugh.gif




This might have been posted already but if not, this was another angle from SI.com's Ian Thomsen:


[h1]Weekly Countdown: LeBron's decision could redefine greatness[/h1]Is LeBron still The Man? This was the question being asked by people around the league who accused James of running away from his responsibilities as a franchise leader. Charles Barkley said he was "disappointed" that James chose to "piggyback" onto Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. Magic general manager Otis Smith mocked James for preferring a lesser role with the Heat: "I thought he was more of a competitor. The great ones usually stay in one location."
"The most explosive part of this is that a great player left to go not do it on his own -- and in his prime years. When has that ever happened?" a Western Conference GM told me. "The reason we're hearing so many people react the way they have is because they feel like the sanctity of greatness in the NBA is tarnished.

"It's like one of those movies when the baseball player lets everybody down because he isn't the hero everybody thought he was and they show a kid crying because his hero isn't what he was supposed to be. We all thought LeBron was a leader, and now it's a letdown to think we were all wrong about him."

There are two parts to this story involving James. The first involves the way he announced his decision, for which I criticized him in Sports Illustrated this week. He hurt himself badly by putting the needs of the TV show ahead of his relationships with his hometown fans. The second -- and separate -- issue involves this question of being The Man and whether he couldn't stand the pressure of being that in Cleveland. I'm not sold on the idea that he wanted to be or needs to be The Man -- at least not in the way that others wanted him to be.

• Michael Jordan ruined it for everybody. The biggest impact of Jordan's success in Chicago was his creation of The Man. Before he came along, that title --The Man -- didn't exist in an admirable way. As a matter of fact, if you had someone who saw himself as The Man on your team, you probably weren't going to win the championship.

In the 43 years before Jordan's title breakthrough in 1990, only once had a player ever led the league in scoring while leading his team to the championship. The only time it happened was in 1970-71 when Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (who at that time went by his given name of Lew Alcindor) led the NBA with 31.7 points while carrying the Milwaukee Bucks to their only title. For more than four decades it was a golden rule in the NBA that the highest-scoring players weren't winners. The Celtics lead the NBA with 17 championships, and they've proudly never had a player who led the league in scoring.

In the pre-Jordan years, an NBA player could follow one of two roads: You could be like Wilt Chamberlain, whose scoring average ranged from 33.5 points to 50.4 points over his first seven seasons, but didn't win a championship until his scoring plummeted to 24.1 points as a 30-year-old with the 76ers in 1966-67; or you could be like Bill Russell, who averaged an unimpressive 15.1 points yet led the Celtics to 11 championships in his 13 seasons.

The best players couldn't have it both ways in those days. You were either selfish or selfless, either a prolific scorer or a team player. Even Abdul-Jabbar spent much of his career hearing complaints that he was -- apart from his lone breakthrough with the Bucks -- too self-indulgent to be a dominant winner.

Then along came Jordan to ruin everything. The Bulls won six titles and he was the NBA's No. 1 scorer for every one of those championship seasons. I always thought his legacy did a lot of harm to the NBA by setting an example that his descendants would try and fail to emulate. The NBA has spent the last decade-and-a-half searching for the next Michael Jordan, and it has been a colossally unsuccessful wild goose chase. He was one of a kind, the exception to the rule, and the NBA has made a huge mistake in attempting to hold other players accountable to Jordan's standard.

The confusing example of Jordan enabled Allen Iverson to think he could be a self-absorbed scorer and a champion simultaneously. It also enabled the whole Shaq-and-Kobe fiasco over who should be The Man. It made the NBA unpopular among traditional fans, who saw a generation of young players scoring selfishly in pursuit of salary and celebrity and all the while rationalizing it because, well, wasn't that how Jordan did it?

Through no fault of his own, Jordan was viewed by an entire misguided generation of players who drew the wrong conclusion from his success. They looked up to him and decided, "Greed is good."

Then along came LeBron ...

• LeBron doesn't want to be Jordan. Hasn't this been obvious from the start? When I began hearing about James as a high school underclassman in Ohio, NBA scouts were saying he could have been the No. 1 pick as a 16-year-old sophomore because he was more of a playmaker than a scorer. Of course, he had all of the gifts for scoring, but so do a lot of prodigies in high school; what set apart James was his transcendent vision as a passer whose unselfishness elevated the performances of his less-talented teammates.

Following Cleveland's 79-76 loss to the Pistons in Game 1 of the 2007 Eastern finals, James was second-guessed for passing to Donyell Marshall for a three-pointer (which he missed) instead of taking the ball to the basket himself. One of the arguments held against James was that Jordan would have taken it upon himself to score at the end of the game.

But what if James has never viewed himself as the second coming? What if he never wanted to be the next Jordan?

In this week's SI, I bring up the idea that maybe James wasn't running away from his responsibilities in Cleveland. Maybe instead he went to Miami because he wants to redefine himself on terms of his own choosing. Maybe his only crime against basketball is that he wants to be Magic instead of Michael -- which is no crime at all.

• Wasn't Magic The Man? Of course he was. Magic Johnson played with Abdul-Jabbar and James Worthy, who were both prolific Hall of Fame scorers. I never heard anyone complain that Magic was reneging on his responsibilities as a superstar because he wasn't leading the Lakers in scoring, or because he was distributing the ball to his teammates when a big shot was needed.

I remember just the opposite: Magic and Larry Bird are lauded for saving the NBA because they were passers. The NBA had been known as a me-first league of selfish scorers who pursued their own numbers ahead of team goals. Magic and Larry were saviors because they had the ability to score, but they set aside the pursuit of stats because they wanted to win more than anything. They produced entertaining and beautiful basketball while contributing to something larger than themselves, and people loved them for that.

Jordan's inimitable style was the embodiment of the greedy 1990s -- if Ayn Rand had written about basketball, she would have invented the character of Michael Jordan. But Jordan's success had the unexpected consequence of warping the view of how basketball should be played. He created the standard that all great players should be The Man, and his influence ran deep -- so deep that among those criticizing James for passing up the last shot three years ago was none other than Magic himself.

• A restoration of fundamental values? If LeBron reinvents himself as a more athletic version of Magic, and if the Heat win multiple championships while he's creating plays for Wade and Bosh to finish, is James going to be criticized for his move from Cleveland to Miami? Of course not. I believe he'll be celebrated for sacrificing his scoring numbers in order to take on a role that will ultimately be seen as reviving fluid team play and improving the standards of the NBA.

For those who believe James will never overcome the indignity of his televised announcement last week, just think about how unpopular Kobe Bryant was four years ago and how popular he is today. Everything turned around for him because he won championships. The same will happen for James.

This is a country of front-runners and we value winning above all else. This Miami team is set up to win in the open floor with aggressive defense that liberates James and Wade to push the ball in transition and finish above the rim. Fans are going to love that style of play, and they're going to love seeing James play in the open floor far more often than he did for Cleveland. If the Heat respond by winning in June, James' departure to Miami will be viewed as a visionary move. He'll be lauded for reducing his own stats in order to win championships in the pursuit of beautiful team basketball -- the same standards that made heroes of Magic and Larry and Russell.

The reason James isn't getting the benefit of the doubt for his choice is because he walked out on his home region in a shameful way. He treated his own fans badly, and only time and success can separate him from that disgrace.

I was among those who didn't think James and Wade could play together, but that's because I too was locked into the idea of both players wanting to be leading stars. But if James is the passer and Wade is the finisher -- and both are sharing the ball in transition, as they surely will do -- there's no reason they shouldn't flourish together.

Talent dictates its own terms, especially put to good use. If James is winning in a big way, people will forget the means of his exit and focus on the ends -- the championships and the explosive, fast-breaking style in which they're being won. In the end, he'll be credited with steering the NBA back to its roots while holding future generations to his team-first standard.

Of course, he gets the last laugh only if he wins. He has to win. No kidding.
 
Originally Posted by Trelvis Tha Thrilla

Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest? Seriously, to some guys that really isn't as important as winning. Maybe his deal is...who cares about the greatest, 
Then why does he call himself the "Chosen One" and the "King"???


 I don't know the origin of his nicknames but King James is an obvious play on words and the chosen one could be that he's the biggest thing to ever come out of Akron..I don't know?  Whatever the origin, talking it or tatting it and walking it are two different things.  I'm not a huge Lebron fan but I've never seen refer to himself as King or the chosen one or have the arrogance that comes along with that type of nickname.

Before bron decided to go to Miami, he was one of the NBA good guys, now cats writing his obituary left and right..he'll never be the greatest...he's soft...the championships don't mean as much...This man has a lot of years and plenty of games to be played...how about we wait until the season starts before we brand him one thing or another.
 
Originally Posted by Trelvis Tha Thrilla

Originally Posted by JinKazama

Did anybody ever stop and think that Lebron doesn't WANT to be the greatest? Seriously, to some guys that really isn't as important as winning. Maybe his deal is...who cares about the greatest, 
Then why does he call himself the "Chosen One" and the "King"???


 I don't know the origin of his nicknames but King James is an obvious play on words and the chosen one could be that he's the biggest thing to ever come out of Akron..I don't know?  Whatever the origin, talking it or tatting it and walking it are two different things.  I'm not a huge Lebron fan but I've never seen refer to himself as King or the chosen one or have the arrogance that comes along with that type of nickname.

Before bron decided to go to Miami, he was one of the NBA good guys, now cats writing his obituary left and right..he'll never be the greatest...he's soft...the championships don't mean as much...This man has a lot of years and plenty of games to be played...how about we wait until the season starts before we brand him one thing or another.
 
iLLoQuent aka DSK wrote:

I mentioned it in the other thread and Downtown43 expanded on it...him turning down a team like Chicago w/ the pieces they have set up (also considering Mike Miller would have followed wherever LBJ went) spoke volumes to me about his mentality. Where others would have relished the immense challenges a Chicago or NY had to offer...he chose the one HE felt would take the most pressure off him. 'Nuff said.
 
How is choosing Miami taking the most pressure off of him?  If anything, him being with Wade and Bosh puts the MOST pressure on him because now all you haters are "expecting" nothing less than a title THIS year.  I doubt he felt choosing Miami would've tooken the most pressure off of him and if he did then he's a straight up idiot.

Anyway, Bron's changing the game for better or worse.
 
iLLoQuent aka DSK wrote:

I mentioned it in the other thread and Downtown43 expanded on it...him turning down a team like Chicago w/ the pieces they have set up (also considering Mike Miller would have followed wherever LBJ went) spoke volumes to me about his mentality. Where others would have relished the immense challenges a Chicago or NY had to offer...he chose the one HE felt would take the most pressure off him. 'Nuff said.
 
How is choosing Miami taking the most pressure off of him?  If anything, him being with Wade and Bosh puts the MOST pressure on him because now all you haters are "expecting" nothing less than a title THIS year.  I doubt he felt choosing Miami would've tooken the most pressure off of him and if he did then he's a straight up idiot.

Anyway, Bron's changing the game for better or worse.
 
Originally Posted by philly5fan

Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
Scottie Pippen became one of the greatest players of all time playing alongside MJ.. and Phil Jackson became one of the greatest coaches of all time because he coached MJ.. Its not like Jordan got to handpick which team he was gonna play for.. he got drafted by Chicago so he stuck it out with them and made them the elite team of 90s. Do you really think Scottie Pippen would be one of the 50 greatest players ever if Seattle had kept him? Jordan made those role-players look better than they were also. Do you think people would really remember guys like B.J Armstrong and John Paxson and Bill Cartwright if they never played alongside MJ? (Jordan did have alot of good players for the second 3-peat but that was because he had already made the Bulls a mini-dynasty and other players wanted to go to Chocago and be apart of that) Saying Jordan would have left is a pathetic argument that is based on absolutely zero truths or facts to try and support Lebrons decision. Im not bashing Lebron for leaving Cleveland but he could have went to another team where he would have been "the man" and had a chance to continue his legacy of greatness and make a bid at being the G.O.A.T. Imagine if he would have went to Chicago, where he would have had a chance to expand on the dynasty that Jordan started and he could have been the second in line of great Bulls players (like how Elgin Baylor and Jerry West passed the torch to Magic and Kareem and they passed it to Kobe and Shaq).. But he chose to go to Miami and play with two already established all-stars so all the Lebron fans have to live that.. it just is what it is
 
Originally Posted by philly5fan

Im sure Lebron wouldn't have went anywhere else if he played in a big city like Chicago... with one of the greatest coaches of all time and one of the NBA top 50 greatest players as his sidekick.. with all the perfect role players

But if MJ played in Cle with that squad he woulda been outta there asap... and probably killed a few of his teammates before he left out the way he used to do them in practice lol
Scottie Pippen became one of the greatest players of all time playing alongside MJ.. and Phil Jackson became one of the greatest coaches of all time because he coached MJ.. Its not like Jordan got to handpick which team he was gonna play for.. he got drafted by Chicago so he stuck it out with them and made them the elite team of 90s. Do you really think Scottie Pippen would be one of the 50 greatest players ever if Seattle had kept him? Jordan made those role-players look better than they were also. Do you think people would really remember guys like B.J Armstrong and John Paxson and Bill Cartwright if they never played alongside MJ? (Jordan did have alot of good players for the second 3-peat but that was because he had already made the Bulls a mini-dynasty and other players wanted to go to Chocago and be apart of that) Saying Jordan would have left is a pathetic argument that is based on absolutely zero truths or facts to try and support Lebrons decision. Im not bashing Lebron for leaving Cleveland but he could have went to another team where he would have been "the man" and had a chance to continue his legacy of greatness and make a bid at being the G.O.A.T. Imagine if he would have went to Chicago, where he would have had a chance to expand on the dynasty that Jordan started and he could have been the second in line of great Bulls players (like how Elgin Baylor and Jerry West passed the torch to Magic and Kareem and they passed it to Kobe and Shaq).. But he chose to go to Miami and play with two already established all-stars so all the Lebron fans have to live that.. it just is what it is
 
Back
Top Bottom