Category: NBA (Page 502 of 595)

That’s what we were waiting for

LeBron James has taken a lot of (much deserved) criticism over the last couple of years for his tendency to play lackadaisically and for his statement that his #1 goal is to become a “global icon” (instead of a NBA champion), but he showed last night that he has the heart and talent to single-handedly will his team to a playoff win.

He dropped a career playoff-high 48 points (including his team’s last 25) on one of the best defensive teams in the league in what might go down as the most amazing individual performance in league history. (You can see the final 25 points here.)

Inevitably, James has drawn comparisons to Michael Jordan, but he’s really more like another MJ – Magic Johnson – a point forward who handles the ball and serves as playmaker for his team. While Jordan was the consummate finisher (allowing Scottie Pippen to fill the playmaker role), Magic was the consummate catalyst, distributing the ball to his teammates at exactly the right moment to give them the best opportunity for success.

Normally, this is how LeBron tries to play, but he’s not hitting the court with James Worthy, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar or Byron Scott. He’s playing with the likes of Larry Hughes, Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Drew Gooden. Last night, the entire Cavs roster was pretty ineffective, especially down the stretch, so LeBron took it upon himself to win the game. He showed that killer instinct that Jordan, Magic and Larry Bird showed every time they stepped on the floor.

But that’s what’s so frustrating about LeBron. He should be living in that zone, night in and night out. The will to win is not a finite resource. You’re not going to use it up if you approach the first game of the season the same way you approach Game 5 of the Conference Finals. The mindset should be the same before every game: there’s a team that wants to beat you tonight, and you’re not going to let it happen.

If the Cavs somehow end up losing this series after LeBron’s performance in Game 5, it will be a crushing blow to the franchise. They don’t have any salary cap flexibility until the summer of ’09, so this is pretty much the team that LeBron has to play with for the next couple of years. The only way they’ll get better is via the draft (Daniel Gibson is turning out to be a very nice pick) and possibly finding a taker for Ilgauskas or Hughes, though given their bloated salaries, it’s unlikely.

I don’t think this team has a chance in hell against the Spurs – they’re severely outmatched at every position but small forward and I don’t see how Mike Brown will ever lead any team to a title – but if LeBron can repeat his Game 5 performance three or four more times in the Finals, you never know.

Here’s the big question: is LeBron living in this zone or is he just passing through?

Call him King!!!!!!!

LeBron James answered all the critics with one of the greatest performances in NBA Playoff history.

LeBron James used one of the most spectacular performances in playoff history to lift the Cleveland Cavaliers to the verge of their greatest season.

James’ career playoff-high 48 points — including 29 of his team’s final 30 — carried the Cavaliers to within a win of the NBA finals for the first time in franchise history with a 109-107 double-overtime victory over the Detroit Pistons on Thursday night.

James made a go-ahead layup with 2.2 seconds left and Detroit’s Chauncey Billups missed a shot in the lane on the ensuing possession.

LeBron was coasting in the first half of the season and took some heat, and he’s always taking crap from critics trying to put down his game. Thursday night he showed that he is one of the great ones.

Emailer steals Bill Simmons’ column

In Bill Simmons’ latest column, “20 reasons to heart Cavs-Pistons,” one of his readers steals the show.

I thoroughly enjoyed this e-mail from Rob in Kailua, Hawaii: “I’ve been noticing that during the Detroit-Cleveland series Gooden and Rasheed get into arguments or little scuffles at least 2-3 times a game. Is there a history there? My theory is that Gooden’s little patch of hair on his neck used to be the little patch of hair missing from Rasheed’s head. Drew must have won some epic battle and now wears that patch as a medal of honor. That’s the only logical explanation for such a ridiculous hairdo right?”

That’s some great stuff, Rob.

Kobe Bryant trade talk

Should I stay or should I go?

It appears that Kobe Bryant has been listening to the Clash lately; the guy can’t decide if he wants a trade. On Wednesday, Bryant changed his tune at least twice, which has fueled speculation about potential trades that could go down. One thing’s for sure – something is going to happen with the Lakers this summer. Either they’ll bring in another star to play alongside Bryant, or they’ll deal him to another team.

In my latest column, I examine how Bryant and the Lakers got to this point and also identify some possible places the talented guard might land.

Is Deron Williams better than Chris Paul?

The Utah Jazz took a lot of heat for drafting Deron Williams over Chris Paul in 2005, especially when Paul ran away with the ROY award while Williams spent half the year on the bench. But now that Williams has the Jazz in the conference finals, the doubters have been silenced.

In my latest column, I explore the reasoning behind the pick and take a look at the numbers both players have put up since they entered the league.

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