This story made my morning because I concern LeBron James as
one of the biggest crybabies in sports.
By the way has anyone notice that James will have a new show
this month similar to what the Rock Dwayne Johnson did. It was the fall of 1981
and Magic Johnson was not happy. The Los Angeles Lakers had just won
five in a row, but Johnson was feeling constrained by the new offense head
coach Paul Westhead had installed.
Westhead met with his star point guard over what he called a
"lack of concentration," according to a Sports Illustrated report. It
didn't go well. Because in the locker room after that meeting, Johnson told the
media he couldn't play under Westhead's system anymore and wanted to be traded.
John Rockwell, a close friend of Lakers owner Dr. Jerry
Buss, was dispatched to find a solution that didn't involve trading the
conductor of Showtime.
There is perhaps no greater articulation of the Lakers'
unwavering commitment to the star system than the clarity Buss showed in
choosing Johnson over Westhead.
There was no hesitation. Westhead was fired the next morning
when the team returned to Los Angeles with three years and more than $1 million
remaining on his contract. Pat Riley took over as head coach, and the rest is
history.
The rest is history because Johnson performed and won
championships. That's the other side of giving stars whatever they want, or
think they want, in order to be happy. You better win enough to make all the
special consideration worth it.
The Lakers and free-agent forward Carmelo Anthony are
pumping the brakes on a possible deal, with the team struggling in its pursuit
of a postseason berth.
Kobe Bryant could dictate when and how much he was
going to play, practice or pass to his teammates because he would go out and
will the team to wins. And as he aged, Buss' kids rewarded Bryant for the five
championships he won the franchise with a two-year, $48.5 million contract as
he was coming off a torn Achilles tendon, just as Buss had rewarded Johnson.
Because of their experience with superstars and everything
they bring along with them, there was perhaps no better franchise
for LeBron James to play out his golden years than the Lakers.
They knew how to handle superstars. And at this stage in
James' career, with three championships, eight consecutive NBA Finals
appearances to his name and an equally burgeoning business and political
profile off the court, James is a transcendent star. So the Lakers were
prepared to do whatever he needed to be happy.
He didn't want to have a media conference in Los Angeles
before he opened his Promise School back in Akron, Ohio. The Lakers said OK.
He talked with Johnson about finding playmakers and guys
known for their toughness, which effectively resulted in a roster lacking in
shooting and floor spacing. The Lakers went out and got players who fit that
description -- who were willing to play on one-year deals.
Johnson said the Lakers didn't want to make the team like
the Cleveland Cavaliers all over again for James. But sure enough,
James found himself back in a ball-dominant role; though he didn't have the
shooters surrounding him to space the floor and open driving lanes to
capitalize on his pinpoint passing, like he did in Miami and
Cleveland.
Magic was right. It wasn't like Cleveland all over again:
Los Angeles is ranked 22nd in offensive efficiency this season with the roster
he put together.
But it all could have worked if James hadn't gotten hurt on
Christmas Day and missed 18 of the next 19 games. James was just starting to
find his footing with this new cast in Los Angeles. The team was starting to
get healthy and find enough consistency to develop an identity.
Of course, James did get hurt. And pretty much everything
since then has been a disaster.
After Monday's 113-105 loss to the LA
Clippers, it seems increasingly likely the Lakers will miss the playoffs for a
sixth straight season. It's a fate James hasn't felt since his second NBA
season, and he has expressed nothing but disgust about it every time he has
been asked.
A few weeks ago, James turned to the local beat reporters at
his locker and tried to explain that they didn't know him well enough to
understand that he did not tolerate losing like this. Then he turned to ESPN's
Dave McMenamin, who had covered him during James' last four years in Cleveland,
looking for some understanding and said, "Dave knows me."
James was exactly right. The Lakers treated him as they
would any of the superstars who have donned the purple and gold; but the
organization, its fans and the players didn't know him. They only knew of what
he had done for Cleveland and Miami. He had equity where he'd won
championships.
Here in Los Angeles, he just had expectations to deliver on
or fall short of.
Had he won here before or wrapped his arms around the city
once he arrived, there might be more understanding. But such is the downside of
a superstar joining a new franchise at this stage in his career and then
effectively failing to launch.
James claimed that he hasn’t been apart of a season with so
many injuries to key players. But you would that someone that has played
basketball would expect to see a lot of injuries. It's just the way the season
has been for the Lakers and there’s nothing anyone can do.
James and the Lakers really never got going before
everything fell apart. And once it did, he couldn't do nearly enough to stop
it.
It's hard to remember how good the Lakers and James looked
before he tore his groin at the Golden State Warriors on Christmas
and the wheels fell off. When the season is over and sober evaluations start
taking place perhaps that will factor into the decisions on how to move
forward.
But right now, it all feels like a series of missteps and
misfortune that everyone shares some blame in.
There was the failed pursuit of Anthony Davis that
left half the players on the roster questioning whether James, the Lakers'
front office or both still wanted them. That was a self-inflicted blow the team
never seemed to recover from.
There were injuries to Rajon Rondo and Lonzo
Ball that kept them out for huge chunks of time; nagging injuries to Tyson
Chandler, Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma and Josh Hart; and
trades for Mike Muscala and Reggie Bullock (long-awaited
shooters!) that have yet to pay any real dividends.
The Lakers went 6-12 in the 18 games James missed. Since he
has come back, they haven't been much better, and now they have lost nine of
their past 12 games. James is still getting back into top shape after the most
serious injury of his career, and it has manifested itself especially on the
defensive end of the floor.
Through Christmas, the Lakers had a defensive rating of
104.5 when James was on the floor. Since Christmas, the Lakers have a defensive
rating of 111.9 when James is on the floor.
Since his return from injury, the Lakers have a defensive
rating of 109.6 when James is on the floor in four wins; the Lakers have a
defensive rating of 113.1 when James is on the floor in the eight losses.
It might not have been a strictly basketball decision for
James to join the Lakers. But basketball is still his core business, and a
failure like this doesn't sit well. That's the downside of committing as fully
as the Lakers do to a star system.
The NBA is a win, loss league and that’s how you succeed in
the NBA. If you’re the best player in the league as James thinks he is then you
have to lead your team to win regardless. At the end of the day it doesn’t
matter what you do instead it comes down to wins and losses and right the
Lakers are losing.
Results is how many wins you can accumulate throughout the
course of the season, so you take the good with the bad and you just keep
pushing forward.
While the failures can't be placed on any one person, James,
Johnson and general manager Rob Pelinka will have to answer for a lot of it.
Head coach Luke Walton could lose his job over it. Most of the roster wasn't
going to be back next year anyway, given the team's insistence on signing
players to only one-year contracts to preserve salary-cap space for a second
star this summer. But you have to assume even larger-scale roster changes will
be implemented given the disappointment of this season.
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