I thought OKC would've won this series before it started. They are my second favorite team to root for. I was happy to have a good Finals to look forward to.
But man, I'm so happy to see Lebron and D Wade and the rest of the guys make this happen. These guys worked hard to get here.
Next year is never guaranteed.
I thought OKC would've won this series before it started. They are my second favorite team to root for. I was happy to have a good Finals to look forward to.
But man, I'm so happy to see Lebron and D Wade and the rest of the guys make this happen. These guys worked hard to get here.
Next year is never guaranteed.
You're right. The All-Star Team in Miami was his ONLY option besides wasting away in Cleveland. For the life of me, I still can't figure out why there weren't more than two teams interested in LeBron.
I didn't say that the Heat are necessarily a reflection of society's problems. Just that the "I want it now" mentality will likely contribute to the other elite players in the league forming superteams now that they just saw LeBron/Wade/Bosh win a ring within 2 years of joining forces. Do you think all the other star players in the league are just going to be content to wait until LeBron/Wade/Bosh retire to get their ring, or are they going to try and do something about it? My money is on them doing something about it.
Who cares? What was more fun, six great teams in the 80's? Or no dynasties in the 70's?
Guess which one caused the NBA in the tape delay era, and the other made it the most popular league at the time?
It was the best option other that wasting away in Cleveland. And you seem to underestimate how difficult it is to make cap space for multiple all stars on one team. The Heat were an anomaly. It would be almost impossible for a GM to sign 3 players like James/Wade/Bosh unless it was the perfect situation/time.
You're right. The All-Star Team in Miami was his ONLY option besides wasting away in Cleveland. For the life of me, I still can't figure out why there weren't more than two teams interested in LeBron.
I didn't say that the Heat are necessarily a reflection of society's problems. Just that the "I want it now" mentality will likely contribute to the other elite players in the league forming superteams now that they just saw LeBron/Wade/Bosh win a ring within 2 years of joining forces. Do you think all the other star players in the league are just going to be content to wait until LeBron/Wade/Bosh retire to get their ring, or are they going to try and do something about it? My money is on them doing something about it.
I'm happy for LeBron. Despite the hate he gets for a lot of things, two things make me happy for him:
1) He's one of the most unselfish superstars in NBA history. It's a silly cliche, but he plays the game the right way.
2) He's faced incredible pressure since he was sixteen year old, and except for about 24 hours, he's handled incredibly well.
How DARE LeBron spend busting his ass for a ****ty team in Cleveland, where his second best player was MO WILLIAMS, for seven years, to actually play with a decent team.
HOW. DARE. HE.
The fact that there will be 4 or 5 teams every year who are the class of field doesn't bother me. That's the case most years. It's the fact that the way guys will team up and gravitate to the big market cities will ensure that it will basically be the SAME 4 or 5 teams every year into perpetuity that bothers me.
It's nice to think that a small market team could be managed right and build up to a championship level, and in the past, despite some challenges, that could still happen from time to time. But when all the star players just want to play on a superteam in NY, LA, Miami or Chicago the small market teams will basically just be renting those guys till they go to chase a ring in a big city. That sucks, IMO.
I agree his move to Miami was to better his future. But he handled it in such a poor manner that he came off as a douche, for lack of a better term.
Congrats on his first.
