plus we have much better supporting cast.
bynum
odom and few others
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"Queen James can go to Miami, but his Championship Rings will be worth shit.He is choosing the easiest way and just shows how overrated he is.He had already in Cleveland the best supporting cast and could not win. His teammates helped the Cavs getting the best record in regular season. And when they lost against the Celtics all the Queen James cocksuckers came out again and blaming his supporting cast. If Lebron can not win a ring with the supporting cast the Cavs dominated the whole season he is highly overrated.That's a fact. And if he will try now to win a ring with Wade and Bosh all his Rings will be worthless.What will come next? In case he can not win a ring with Wade and Bosh and goes down as the biggest joke in nba-history, maybe he will try it again with Spiderman, Batman, Superman and Hulk."
Who's Kobe Mr.Freeze or The Penguin lmfao.....
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"Queen James can go to Miami, but his Championship Rings will be worth shit.He is choosing the easiest way and just shows how overrated he is.He had already in Cleveland the best supporting cast and could not win. His teammates helped the Cavs getting the best record in regular season. And when they lost against the Celtics all the Queen James cocksuckers came out again and blaming his supporting cast. If Lebron can not win a ring with the supporting cast the Cavs dominated the whole season he is highly overrated.That's a fact. And if he will try now to win a ring with Wade and Bosh all his Rings will be worthless.What will come next? In case he can not win a ring with Wade and Bosh and goes down as the biggest joke in nba-history, maybe he will try it again with Spiderman, Batman, Superman and Hulk."
Who's Kobe Mr.Freeze or The Penguin lmfao.....
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With LeBron, Miami would have a trio so conceivably good that it could offset the inevitable lack of depth that we expect with so many roster spots still open and no money to fill those spots.Marc Stein,ESPN.com
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With LeBron, Miami would have a trio so conceivably good that it could offset the inevitable lack of depth that we expect with so many roster spots still open and no money to fill those spots.Marc Stein,ESPN.com
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"People don't realize the draw of Miami. Not only is it one of the best cities to play in, but Mickey Arison is an excellent owner and Pat Riley is a championship coach, if he indeed comes back to the sidelines. The Heat have a great reputation as an organization, and pairing with Wade gives Bosh (and possibly LeBron) a great chance to win. None of the other teams could offer all of this in one package. New York is a great city, but a bad organization with no real chance to win. Chicago has an owner with a bad reputation, and it's not the best city to play in. New Jersey is New Jersey. Bosh might have had success in Houston or Cleveland, but he likes Miami best. Not a bad decision at all..."
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"People don't realize the draw of Miami. Not only is it one of the best cities to play in, but Mickey Arison is an excellent owner and Pat Riley is a championship coach, if he indeed comes back to the sidelines. The Heat have a great reputation as an organization, and pairing with Wade gives Bosh (and possibly LeBron) a great chance to win. None of the other teams could offer all of this in one package. New York is a great city, but a bad organization with no real chance to win. Chicago has an owner with a bad reputation, and it's not the best city to play in. New Jersey is New Jersey. Bosh might have had success in Houston or Cleveland, but he likes Miami best. Not a bad decision at all..."
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"Lebron is going to CHICAGO!!! id rather be 2nd to Michael Jordan rather than be 2nd to D-WADE coz miami is d-wade's team... if they win championships together, d-wade will always have 1 more ring to show than lebron..."
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"Lebron is going to CHICAGO!!! id rather be 2nd to Michael Jordan rather than be 2nd to D-WADE coz miami is d-wade's team... if they win championships together, d-wade will always have 1 more ring to show than lebron..."
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"Also, when did we get into the business of counting rings before they come and then counting them out if/when they come? IF Lebron wins a ring in Miami, it will count just like Kobe's 3 did when he played with Shaq, and Magic's when he played with Kareem and Co. Some of you need to stop over-reacting to every little scenario. "
Dont know what your talking about....
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"Also, when did we get into the business of counting rings before they come and then counting them out if/when they come? IF Lebron wins a ring in Miami, it will count just like Kobe's 3 did when he played with Shaq, and Magic's when he played with Kareem and Co. Some of you need to stop over-reacting to every little scenario. "
Dont know what your talking about....
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" Isn't the Heat Wades team? How is Lebron going to deal with that or will the Heat become Lebrons team? How will Wade deal with playing second fiddle? No way this works out. "
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" Isn't the Heat Wades team? How is Lebron going to deal with that or will the Heat become Lebrons team? How will Wade deal with playing second fiddle? No way this works out. "
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Cleveland does not own LeBron James. LeBron James was born in Akron. He was drafted by his hometown Cavaliers, who signed him to a contract. He played at a high enough level to make his contract a relative bargain. He then signed an extension with the Cavaliers. Again, he played at a high enough level to more than justify the money he was given by the Cavaliers.
LeBron does not owe the Cavaliers any more than he has given them. LeBron has never needed to pay off some cosmic debt to Cleveland. He’s done all he can to bring a title to the city, but it was never about anybody forcing LeBron to win a title for the Cavaliers. He tried to win Cleveland a title because he wanted to. Cavs fans just got to watch.
Tonight, the eve of what was supposed to become LeBron’s big day, is instead the nadir of his career. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction, and all the hype and adoration that LeBron James inspired has come crashing down upon his ringless self. He is a King without a crown, and now he is being criticized for daring to take the throne. All LeBron did was play basketball very well and lap up every bit of praise lavished upon him for doing so. Whatever LeBron is other than a basketball player, we made him into. Now we have taken it upon us to punish LeBron for his hubris, and ourselves for trusting it. What the gods wish to destroy, they must first label as promising.
Tonight, LeBron is a man without a country. He hasn’t won the championship that would endear him to the fans who want a winner, and he hasn’t stayed humble or loyal enough to the fans who want their superstars to be paradigms of truth, justice, and the American way. He never brought his hometown team to the promised land, and he’ll never be truly worshiped there unless he does. If he leaves, he will go to a new team, a better team, in a bigger city. There, he will never be fully embraced, because he needed to take a shortcut to greatness. If he stays and does not win a championship, he will forever be seen as a player too weak-willed and weak-skilled to have ever truly been great. Even if he stays and does take the Cavs to a championship, he’s gone too far down the aforementioned rabbit hole to ever be the humble, team-first, hometown hero he wants Cleveland to see him as.
On Thursday, LeBron will have a new contract, and may someday get a championship ring. What he will never be is what he was once supposed to be; a player so great that he would unite all basketball fans under his banner, and achieve the kind of consensus greatness that Jordan once did.
The seven seasons that made up the (1st act of?) the LeBron Era in Cleveland ultimately ended in disappointment, failure, heartbreak, misery, doubt, bitterness, and plenty of suffering for everyone who lived and died with LeBron and the team he led. Personally, I wouldn’t trade those seven years of watching LeBron play for anything in the world.
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Cleveland does not own LeBron James. LeBron James was born in Akron. He was drafted by his hometown Cavaliers, who signed him to a contract. He played at a high enough level to make his contract a relative bargain. He then signed an extension with the Cavaliers. Again, he played at a high enough level to more than justify the money he was given by the Cavaliers.
LeBron does not owe the Cavaliers any more than he has given them. LeBron has never needed to pay off some cosmic debt to Cleveland. He’s done all he can to bring a title to the city, but it was never about anybody forcing LeBron to win a title for the Cavaliers. He tried to win Cleveland a title because he wanted to. Cavs fans just got to watch.
Tonight, the eve of what was supposed to become LeBron’s big day, is instead the nadir of his career. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction, and all the hype and adoration that LeBron James inspired has come crashing down upon his ringless self. He is a King without a crown, and now he is being criticized for daring to take the throne. All LeBron did was play basketball very well and lap up every bit of praise lavished upon him for doing so. Whatever LeBron is other than a basketball player, we made him into. Now we have taken it upon us to punish LeBron for his hubris, and ourselves for trusting it. What the gods wish to destroy, they must first label as promising.
Tonight, LeBron is a man without a country. He hasn’t won the championship that would endear him to the fans who want a winner, and he hasn’t stayed humble or loyal enough to the fans who want their superstars to be paradigms of truth, justice, and the American way. He never brought his hometown team to the promised land, and he’ll never be truly worshiped there unless he does. If he leaves, he will go to a new team, a better team, in a bigger city. There, he will never be fully embraced, because he needed to take a shortcut to greatness. If he stays and does not win a championship, he will forever be seen as a player too weak-willed and weak-skilled to have ever truly been great. Even if he stays and does take the Cavs to a championship, he’s gone too far down the aforementioned rabbit hole to ever be the humble, team-first, hometown hero he wants Cleveland to see him as.
On Thursday, LeBron will have a new contract, and may someday get a championship ring. What he will never be is what he was once supposed to be; a player so great that he would unite all basketball fans under his banner, and achieve the kind of consensus greatness that Jordan once did.
The seven seasons that made up the (1st act of?) the LeBron Era in Cleveland ultimately ended in disappointment, failure, heartbreak, misery, doubt, bitterness, and plenty of suffering for everyone who lived and died with LeBron and the team he led. Personally, I wouldn’t trade those seven years of watching LeBron play for anything in the world.
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"If LeBron ends up with Miami, he is no MJ or Kobe who he wants to be compared to. LBJ and Kobe didn't crawl to a team with other superstars to win titles."
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"If LeBron ends up with Miami, he is no MJ or Kobe who he wants to be compared to. LBJ and Kobe didn't crawl to a team with other superstars to win titles."
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"maybe Cleveland is working out a backdoor deal for CP3 to go play with his old coach and team up with Lebron (apparently they are close friends)."
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"maybe Cleveland is working out a backdoor deal for CP3 to go play with his old coach and team up with Lebron (apparently they are close friends)."
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"shame on LeBron. If you want to be the best ever you have prove it and that will not happen in Miami.The mere fact that he is concerned about having "bad knees" at age 31 shows he is SCARED of doing it on his own."
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"shame on LeBron. If you want to be the best ever you have prove it and that will not happen in Miami.The mere fact that he is concerned about having "bad knees" at age 31 shows he is SCARED of doing it on his own."
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