Author: John Paulsen (Page 213 of 937)

Bill Simmons on LeBron and “The Decision”

Apr. 19, 2010 - Cleveland, OHIO, UNITED STATES - epa02124638 LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers smiles as he walks to the bench during the fourth quarter against the Chicago Bulls in their Eastern Conference first round playoff game at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, USA on 19 April 2010. Cleveland defeated Chicago 112-102 to take a 2-0 lead in the seven game series.

In his excellent pre-“The Decision” column, Bill Simmons touches on a number of free agency subjects, but maybe the most interesting is his take on LeBron’s decision to produce “The Decision,” and possibly tear the heart out of the city of Cleveland in the process.

If LeBron picks anyone other than the Cavaliers, it will be the cruelest television moment since David Chase ended “The Sopranos” by making everyone think they lost power. Cleveland will never forgive LeBron, nor should they. He knows better than anyone what kind of sports anguish they have suffered over the years. Losing LeBron on a contrived one-hour show would be worse than Byner’s fumble, Jose Mesa, the Game 5 meltdown against Boston, The Drive, The Shot and everything else. At least those stomach-punch moments weren’t preordained, unless you believe God hates Cleveland (entirely possible, by the way). This stomach-punch moment? Calculated. By a local kid they loved, defended and revered.

It would be unforgivable. Repeat: unforgivable.

And here’s where I really worry, because I don’t think LeBron James has anyone in his life with enough juice to hurl his or her body in front of the concept of “I’m going to announce during a one-hour live show that I’m playing somewhere other than Cleveland.” It’s the best and worst thing about him — he has remained fiercely loyal to his high school friends, but at the same time, he’s surrounded by people his own age who don’t stand up to him and don’t know any better. Picking anyone other than Cleveland on this show would be the meanest thing any athlete has ever done to a city. But he might.

No matter what team LeBron picks tonight, doing it this way is a bad, bad decision. If he picks the Cavs, then he’ll be criticized for dragging this out the way he did and putting the downtrodden city through such anguish when he (probably) knew all along that he was going to re-sign.

If he doesn’t pick the Cavs, he’ll be criticized for crushing the heart of a city that has lived and died with him over the last seven years…on a one-hour national TV special. He could have announced his decision in a million different ways — all of them better.

No matter what happens, the criticism is totally valid. LeBron James is in a no-win situation with regard to his image, but it’s a situation that he went out of his way to create.

He could have committed to the Cavs early and did his best job to recruit a star or two to play with him. Who knows, maybe Joe Johnson, Amare Stoudemire, Carlos Boozer or David Lee would have been agreeable to a sign-and-trade if they had known LeBron was staying put. As of right now, only Lee is still on the market. By intentionally creating all of this drama only to re-sign, he will have unintentionally screwed himself out of a capable running mate.

Then again, if he breaks up with Cleveland, he will screw his image for a long, long time. I like Dwyane Wade and don’t mind Chris Bosh, but if LeBron joins them in Miami, I don’t think I could root for the Heat in a Finals matchup with the Lakers. And given the way I feel about the Lakers, that’s saying a lot.

LeBron leaning Miami?

Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) reacts after a disputed foul by Los Angeles Lakers' Derek Fisher in the second half of their NBA game in Los Angeles on December 25, 2009. The Cavaliers defeated the Lakers 102-87. UPI/Jim Ruymen Photo via Newscom

It appears so, according to the groundswell of sources who are pointing that way. Chris Broussard outlines the decision:

All indications are that LeBron James is leaning toward signing with the Miami Heat on Thursday night, according to several sources with knowledge of the situation.

Chris Paul, one of James’ best friends, has urged him to stay in Cleveland and let new Cavaliers coach Byron Scott coach him, according to sources. With such strong sentiment around him to not go to Miami, it’s possible James could alter his decision.

James’ family and friends are divided over his decision to play in Miami, according to sources. Opinions range from understanding his desire to play with All-Star teammates, to feeling he is selling himself short by joining Wade’s team, to concerns that playing on such a power-packed squad will hurt his brand even if he wins championships.

While sources close to James insist his heart is in Cleveland and remaining with the Cavaliers was his preferred choice, they say he had concerns about signing a six-year deal there and ending up “31 years old, with bad knees and no title.”

Brian Windhorst:

Newsday has reported LeBron has decided on Heat. Only a couple of people can truly confirm this. None have to me at this point.

ESPN has followed Newsday with #LeBron to MIA report. Uptick in salary cap plus no state income tax helped with $:

I still have no direct confirmation from LeBron’s inner circle on Miami. Maybe they’re trying to save suspense in some way.

Ric Bucher:

But the insanity is rising: the 1 source came at me hard that LBJ to Mia is done. Only way I go w/one source on that is if it’s LBJ/Mav.

J.A. Adande:

Part of me thinks LeBron’s camp is just floating this Miami thing to gauge the reaction. And what I’ve seen has not been positive.

I’m going to write more about a possible “Miami Thrice” combination in South Florida a little bit later, but right now I’m going to go have breakfast with my wife and try not to think about LeBron Freaking James for at least an hour.

Adrian Wojnarowski evicerates Team LeBron

REFILE - CORRECTING YEAR Cleveland Cavaliers LeBron James looks on during the second quarter of Game 1 of their NBA Eastern Conference playoff series against the Chicago Bulls in Cleveland, April 17, 2010.REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

Rather quietly, Wojnarowski has turned into one of the best NBA writers out there. Here are the first three paragraphs of his column about the current state of Team LeBron. (Parents may want to ask the kids to leave the room.)

The Championship of Me comes crashing into a primetime cable infomercial that LeBron James(notes) and his cronies have been working to make happen for months, a slow, cynical churning of manufactured drama that sports has never witnessed. As historic monuments go, this is the Rushmore of basketball hubris and narcissism. The vacuous star for our vacuous times. All about ‘Bron and all about nothing.

James is throwing a few foosball tables at Boys & Girls Clubs, an empty gesture out of the empty superstar. He’s turned free agency into the title of our times, a preening pageant of fawning, begging and pleading. Hard-working people are dragged into municipalities and told to hold signs, chant scripted slogans and beg a diva who doesn’t care about them to accept a $100 million contract.

Privately, Dwyane Wade(notes) and Chris Bosh(notes) weren’t pleased on Wednesday morning with the belief that James’ camp was responsible for leaking their plans to a television partner, but then again it makes perfect sense: This isn’t about Wade and Bosh choosing the Heat. It’s about LeBron getting the stage to himself on Thursday night.

Read the rest of the column here.

Wojnarowski has never been much of a fan of Team LeBron or its relationship with ESPN. I suspect, deep down, every non-ESPN NBA writer who has sources of his own but still can’t get any solid info probably feels this way.

Bulls land Boozer

Per ESPN.com…

Carlos Boozer is the latest domino to fall, agreeing to a five-year, $80 million contract with the Chicago Bulls, a source close to the negotiations told ESPN The Magazine’s Ric Bucher on Wednesday.

Looks like the Bulls read my post-Wade/Bosh offseason blueprint. This is a big contract that averages $16 million per season, but as John Hollinger notes, there’s enough room to sign LeBron outright on the off chance that he utters “the Bulls” tomorrow night.

$80 mil deal has cap figure of $13.8M, which should leave juuuuust enough for LBJ if no cap surprise tonite. S&T drops 1st year to $13.2M.

Bulls fans can’t say the team didn’t react quickly to the Wade/Bosh news. Signing Boozer would seemingly put the Bulls back in the picture for LeBron, but even if it doesn’t, it was the next logical move for a franchise with cap space and a need for low post scoring. He will be a nice fit alongside a defensive, offensively-challenged center like Joakim Noah. He will also fare well in the pick-and-roll with Derrick Rose after running so many with Deron Williams over the years.

Spain defeats Germany, 1-0, advances to World Cup Final

Germany's Lukas Podolski fights for the ball with Spain's Sergio Busquets (L) during their 2010 World Cup semi-final soccer match at Moses Mabhida stadium in Durban July 7, 2010. REUTERS/David Gray (SOUTH AFRICA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER WORLD CUP)

Spain had the right combination of ball control and creativity to upend the coolly efficient Germans, 1-0, and advance to play the Netherlands in Sunday’s World Cup Final.

The game-winner came in the 73rd minute, when Carles Puyol came from waaaay outside to head the cornerkick into the net. Germany threatened a few times, but Spain controlled the ball for much of the game and kept the Germans under nearly constant pressure.

Sunday’s matchup between Spain and the Netherlands means that we’ll have a new winner this year.

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