Tag Archive for 'Lebron James'

Lebron sick of departure talk, Windhorst headed to the Plains Dealer, Boobie fires agent

So this will likely get little to no national run, since that’s how these things work, but Bob Finnan had a quote in his News Herald write up about media day from Lebron James regarding all the rumors of his departure in two years:

“Go on the Internet and see every time I’ve been asked if I’m happy in Cleveland and see my response,” he said. “It’s simple. I’ve never given any indication I was leaving Cleveland or I didn’t like being here.

“I love being here and playing in front of these fans. My family is here. I grew up 30 miles away from here.”

My favorite quote from Lebron though was not the one above.  It’s the one below.  Lebron was asked about how he’s improved over the summer due to the level of competition the Olympics brought.  What followed was a reference to Daniel Gibson that must have made Boobie feel like “hey, what did i do?”.

“There’s no way you can’t get better,” he said. “If you can go out and lead guys who are already established, guys who won NBA championships, scoring titles, MVPs and Rookies of the Year, then I should be able to lead Daniel Gibson.”

Speaking of Daniel Gibson, he must have gotten wind of talk of his “team-friendly” deal.  He’s parted ways with his agent Lewis Tucker, joking that “I’m a free agent”.

And a big congratulations goes out to both Brian Windhorst and to Waiting for Next Year.  WFNY made us aware that Brian will be departing the Akron Beacon Journal to join Terry Pluto at the Cleveland Plains Dealer.  Brian has already collaborated on a book with Terry Pluto, and should really solidify the Plains Dealer Cavalier coverage with the ahead of the curve way he’s consistently broken news.

Also be sure to check out Dan Labbe’s notes from media day.  I found his comment about Delonte West being the only Cavalier to shy away from talk of a championship interesting.  Considering the following quote from Delonte on media day, why the restraint?

“My momma’s house is paid for,” he said. “My Uncle Rudy will get his teeth. My daddy got a boat. My little sister’s college is paid for. I can just concentrate on basketball now.”

The Lebron James Song: Watch out for the crossover

I was watching The Sarah Connor Chronicles the other night, and without even seeing the show, everybody reading this understands the premise of how the Terminator movies worked. Some guy developed this piece of technology. It got a mind of it’s own. It killed everyone.

Sometimes I wonder if people ever consider the future when they upload something to YouTube. Not the short term future. Not things like how many people will view their video. But more along the lines of “I can’t get this thing off of the internet”.

On that note, I’ll demonstrate my point. First these two Georgia Tech students with “The Perfect Option”….

And now this…. The Lebron James Song….

The Georgia Tech idiots have clearly taken this to a different level than the Cleveland fan. It’s not really a fair comparison to the Cleveland kid with the terrible crossover.

They somehow appear to have gotten access to the field, some players, and some assistance from the athletics department. I imagine down the line Georgia Tech (much like the Chicago Bears and the Los Angeles Lakers) will realize that this kind of asinine display does not live in a time capsule.

It just gets a find a mind of it’s own and ends up destroying those rappers office credibility when they enter the real world where they want to be taken seriously.

Someday one of these performers may be the boss, and instead of stories of how they drunkingly hooked up with an intern at the Christmas party being thrown around the office, the minions will just forward the above videos. That is unless our aforementioned rappers invent a robot to go back and kill the guy who invented YouTube.

Thanks to Ball Don’t Lie for bring “The Lebron James Song” to my attention.

Thanks to the kid in the Lebron video for ending it with “LBG” as opposed to “LBJ”.

Braylon Edwards chimes in on Lebron’s allegiances

Well Tom Withers of the AP asked Braylon Edwards about how he felt regarding Lebron’s allegiances to both the Cowboys and Yankees.  Braylon of all people is in an interesting position considering he went to Michigan and now plays in Buckeye country.  He had this to say:

“I give him credit for being loyal,” Edwards said Tuesday.

“It didn’t bother me,” Edwards said. “As I’ve gotten to know LeBron, LeBron isn’t a Cleveland guy. LeBron only plays for the Cavaliers, and who knows if he even likes the Cavaliers? He doesn’t like the Indians. He doesn’t like the Browns. He’s a guy from Akron who likes everybody but his hometown.

“I don’t know how that’s possible, but it is what it is, and he is who he is. You know, it’s LeBron.”

That quote about “liking everybody but his hometown” is comforting, at least this week.  After the ass kicking the Zips gave my beloved Syracuse Orange last weekend, I’m still reeling.  They’re so awful, they could lose a bye week. 

Lebron is not a Browns fans or an Indians fan. Get over it.

So I saw the Browns game, even though I myself am not a Browns fan.  It was on prime time, and with so many additions, I wanted to see what the Browns could do.  I have no real rooting interest, although my love of the Buffalo Bills has left with a strong distaste for the Dallas Cowboys over the years.  So I guess you could say I was pulling for Cleveland, but the loss didn’t really affect me on an emotional level.

I say this only to introduce the reason I’m writing this post.  It’s probably not that hard for you Cleveland diehards to come to terms with the fact that while this blog and it’s relative success are tied to the Cavs, that doesn’t mean that I root for other Cleveland teams.

Or then, maybe it is that difficult to accept.

Yes.  I saw Lebron at the game.  And I saw him fraternizing with T.O., Jerry Jones, and Pacman (photo below).

Yes.  That is a Cowboys shirt, and a Yankees baseball hat.  So I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised to see the outcry from protective Cleveland fans absolutely incredulous that Lebron could root for anyone outside of Cleveland.  And yet I am.

I haven’t yet spoke with Mike over at WFNY during their weekly podcasts, so I’m not sure whether the article he wrote on the subject was meant to serve as a satire or genuine outrage.  In either case, I think it’s a good example of an argument I just don’t get (from Waiting for Next Year):

I wonder how many people are still hoping that this guy is staying here after 2010 out of loyalty to our region? He doesn’t even care enough about us to pretend to root for the Browns when the Cowboys are in town. Hell, he won’t even take off his Yankees hat when the Indians are playing New York in a playoff series. Yesterday was just another open slap to the Cleveland sports fan base courtesy of flight number twenty-three.

Count me amongst those who don’t care if he roots for “the region”.  I don’t care if he even rooted for the Cavs as a kid.  Any solace I take in Lebron growing up in Ohio comes from the fact that his friends and family are here.  Not the Browns.  Not the Indians.  The personal connections are the more relevant ones as far as I’m concerned.  My love of the Bills didn’t keep me in Buffalo.  My family may have.

Can anyone imagine Lebron’s idol, Michael Jordan doing something like this in Chicago back in his prime? You wouldn’t see him wearing a Yankees hat while sitting at Comiskey Park and you would NEVER see MJ wearing a Cowboys shirt at a Bears game. Never would happen and the fans in Chicago wouldn’t let him get away with it.

Not to be difficult, but this example may be a little silly.  Dan Gilbert doesn’t own the Indians.  Jerry Reinsdorf, who would later give MJ over $30 million for one season of work with the Bulls owned the Chicago White Sox in addition to the Bulls.

You don’t walk up to your employer and tell him you want his stock options to shit the bed.  Even if you do.  There’s no point in going to a game and flaunting to the guy who pays you directly that you root against his business interests.  That being said, if MJ was that big of a fan of another team, he could have cheered with no real consequences because he was THAT good on the court.  He just didn’t.  Maybe being in a casino or the local OTB sucked up too much of his time to make it out to the ballpark.

MJ, unlike Lebron had aspirations at one point of being a baseball player, and the guy who could help facilitate that happened to also be his boss with the Bulls.  Maybe that factored in, although I doubt it.  Lebron doesn’t need Randy Lerner or Larry Dolan to achieve any of his ambitions. 

Mike continued:

There is a right way and a wrong way to represent yourself as a professional athlete in a city and I honestly can say that LeBron openly rooting against the other pro teams in Cleveland is wrong.

Getting busted selling drugs is wrongHitting women with your SUV and driving away is wrong.  Rooting for your favorite teams is not wrong.  It’s the right of every red-blooded American.  Being an athlete doesn’t mean you’re a second class citizen.  Nobody is going to tell me who to cheer for.  So why would it be any different for Lebron?

I’ve read the argument elsewhere.  “Well he makes millions from Cleveland, so he owes it to the city”.

Wrong.

Lebron is not a mascot.  He’s a basketball player.  He makes millions from the Cavs and Cleveland fans who gobble up merchandise and tickets.  But he’s given more than a fair return on his salary given the market for a player of his skills.  If the NBA was a truly free market, he’d make even more money.  And a LOT more at that.

The only ones taking anything for granted here are fans who think they can suck more and more from Lebron just because he’s so greatly exceeded expectations.  It’s not enough to be an MVP candidate year in and out.  That’s old hat.  Now he’s unofficially been given the title of “Cleveland Ambassador in all things Cleveland”.

Many of the other NBA teams that would line up to pay him wouldn’t even care what he brought off the court.  That’s what the PR staff is for.  They’d be happy to have him solely for the results on the court.

Lebron is not obligated to play the role of ambassador or politician 365 days a year, as much as everyone expects everything he says and does to be the calculated, politically correct thing.  It’s asking too much.  If he’s trumpeting the virtues of Cleveland on a national or global stage even a fraction of the time, it’s above and beyond as far as I’m concerned.

You don’t see Michael Redd talking about the virtues of the Brewers during the Olympic medal ceremonies.  Fuck that guy for loving America!

It would certainly make it easier for those fans who find themselves being assaulted by friends/coworkers if Lebron never did things like wear Yankees or Cowboys gear.  I understand as well as anyone that the fallout is always the same.  Some jackass says,  “Lebron had a Yankees hat.  That’s why he’s leaving for New York”

Instead of just disregarding it though, half of Cleveland goes on the offensive when it happens.  It’s the reason why the term “inferiority complex” gets thrown about by outsiders.

It’s simply too much to ask of any person, let alone a 23-year old who grew up with 24-hour coverage of sports trumpeting the virtues of the Cowboys and the Yankees, to ignore what exists in the outside world in favor of living in a Cleveland-centric bubble.

Drew Gooden was friends with Deshawn Stevenson.  DESHAWN STEVENSON!!!  That guy is a dickbag who not only hates the Cavs, but he disrespected the one player Cleveland fans can turn to as being “better than their guys”.  Lebron’s game should be bulletproof from scrubs and yet Deshawn just fired away like the stupid cops in all the Terminator movies.  Yet, there was no outrage with Gooden maintaining his allegiance with Beardsly McKidTouch because, quite frankly, nobody cares about Drew Gooden enough to write on the matter.  Megan’s Law websites care about who Stevenson is befriending, but for totally different reasons.

I have even more devastating news for you all.  Lebron Jr. will probably end up a Patriots fan.  I guess Lebron should just give him up for adoption and concede that he’ll be part of the 2030 Celtics.

Let’s just get this out of the way now.  Rooting for teams in other cities as opposed to the home team means nothing.  And quite honestly, no fan, no matter how committed to the Cleveland cause, is entitled to have expectations on athletes rooting interests in sports independent of the ones they play.

Now if Lebron started wearing Knicks or Bulls hats in pregames, well then I’d be pissed…..

UPDATE: Philip Morris from the Plains Dealer wrote on the subject as well.  Give it a read here.  And Bill Livingston.  And Amar at Cavalier Attitude.

Who's the asshole here?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

“More Than A Game” Debuts in Toronto

Over the weekend, Lebron James, and 3 of his 4 former Saint Vincent - Saint Mary teammates were in attendance for the Toronto Film Festival for a new documentary, one that followed their development as basketball players and people while in high school. 

The documentary was filmed by Kristopher Belman, an Akron native.  Contrary to what most would assume, Lebron James isn’t the focus of the film.  The film covers all the starters as they grew together, first in grade school, AAU ball, and ultimately ending with their triumphs winning a state title in 2003.

Clint O’ Connor, the movie critic for the Plains Dealer had a write up about the film.  Here’s some of what he had to say:

LeBron James finally found one of the few things he can’t conquer: tears. Welled-up with watery-eyed emotion, James tried to push them back with thumb and forefinger, but they just kept coming. He wasn’t alone. There was a lot of crying and hugging when the lights came up at Saturday’s world premiere of “More Than a Game.”

“This is the first time I’ve cried, in basketball or anything, since we lost that national championship game in eighth grade,” said James after the screening. “This is authentic.”

The film charts the evolution of James, “Little Dru” Joyce, Romeo Travis, Willie McGee, and Sian Cotton, and their incredible run at “St. V” that culminated in a national title in 2003. Four of the five (Cotton couldn’t make it) sat together in the Ryerson Theatre, teasing each other, laughing, and cheering like ninth-graders. They were joined by a large Ohio contingent of friends, former coaches, and family.

“It was flat-out awesome,” said James’ mother Gloria, in her instant thumbs-up review of the film. “Of course, I cried.”

First-time director Belman, a graduate of Walsh Jesuit High School, started “More Than a Game” as a project for a film class at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. Beginning in 2002, he was granted carte blanche access to the team.

Belman said he was able to earn the trust of the players and “Coach Dru” Joyce (Little Dru’s dad) largely because, as a one-man crew, he was so unobtrusive. Most of them didn’t even know his name. “I’d be surprised if any of them have me on their cell phones today as anything but ‘cameraman,’ ” said Belman laughing.

He layered in grainy home videos, old photos, and new interviews, while awaiting the blessing of James to complete the project. The Cavs forward may have been skeptical of the word “documentary,” having weathered a lawsuit in 2005 over a supposed life-story agreement. (The jury agreed with James.)

Obviously, I didn’t see it, so I don’t have much to add, but I have seen a couple of basketball related documentaries that were very much worth seeing.  First was “Heart of the Game”, a documentary which couldn’t have even been scripted to play out as beautifully as it did.  It followed the trials of a girls’ high school basketball team in Seattle, as it dealt with teen pregnancy, sexual abuse, fighting the State’s Athletic governing body, and ultimately culminated with an incredible ending.

The other film “Second Chance Season” was out here in LA, when a filmmaker told the story of Nick Young’s upbringing, his family, his brother’s murder and capped the story off when Nick was selected by the Washington Wizards in the NBA draft.  Jordan Farmar and Josh Shipp both got a lot of run in the movie as they played for rival high schools and later colleges. 

I don’t know how easy either are to find since they were in limited theaters out here, but I’ve definitely seen “Heart of the Game” in blockbuster and on Netflix, and that may be one of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen, regardless of subject matter.