Author Topic: lebron a class act  (Read 19750 times)

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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #30 on: May 18, 2008, 10:12:45 PM »

Offline Edgar

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C'mon SteveW - despite the fact the rules have been drastically changed over the past few years to accommodate the ugly brand of basketball Darth Stern finds most marketable (a la the way LeBaby plays), even if the rules were called by the book today, LeBron would not be nearly as good as he is, statistically.  He is an incredibly overrated player.

Yes, " a unique talent ".  Why I wish more players could take 3 steps and run people over (whilst drawing fouls) as consistently as James - basketball would be so much more enjoyable to watch that way.

well take that couple of travelings out
and take out the couple of mistery fouls he never make

and
he still will score 35 at his 23 during a 7 game and carry with almost all of his team against a veteran team full of stars

yess
that guy is really overrated * pure sarcasm.
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #31 on: May 18, 2008, 10:16:39 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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edit - undoing a staff member's edit. wdleehi
« Last Edit: May 18, 2008, 10:56:22 PM by wdleehi »
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #32 on: May 18, 2008, 10:17:19 PM »

Offline Steve Weinman

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C'mon SteveW - despite the fact the rules have been drastically changed over the past few years to accommodate the ugly brand of basketball Darth Stern finds most marketable (a la the way LeBaby plays), even if the rules were called by the book today, LeBron would not be nearly as good as he is, statistically.  He is an incredibly overrated player.

Yes, " a unique talent ".  Why I wish more players could take 3 steps and run people over (whilst drawing fouls) as consistently as James - basketball would be so much more enjoyable to watch that way.

Brick,

Again, I agree with the assessment that LBJ gets more than his share of...how to put it nicely...'leeway' from the officials.  There's no question about that.  So I don't dispute your claim that he might not be quite as otherworldly statistically without help from the officials (by the way, that's just like Michael wouldn't have been either...or Kobe...or Shaq...or Magic...or just about every other star of the Stern era).

But to call this kid merely "above average" is what strikes an unfair tone with me.  Where I can't agree with you is with the DeShawn-inspired claim that he is "incredibly overrated."  Of course, those words are terms without absolute definitions, so there isn't a way to empirically prove or disprove the correctness of assessment, but when one looks at the body of work this individual has built up in five seasons as well as his set of physical gifts, I think he's largely been rated just fine.

As far as "calling the game by the book" overall, if you're going to knock LeBron down a few statistically pegs, you'll have to do the same to everyone else as well.  Everyone in the league gets away with extra steps on walks.  Everyone gets away with palming.  So on and so forth.  Fundamentally, the game has long since changed for the worse in that regard.  That isn't unique to Bron, and it shouldn't be held against him.

That said, I found your initial post about his character quite amusing -- I don't agree with the whole assessment, but I think there are two sides to the "great character" / "immeasurable ego" issue with him, and you did an entertaining job of putting forth the negative viewpoint on that.  TP on that account.

Hope I cleared up my point.

-sw


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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #33 on: May 18, 2008, 10:18:54 PM »

Offline Edgar

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Man, the way I see it, he's a slightly above average player if he doesn't get the benefits from the refs....

Give Ricky Davis those calls and he'd be a super star too. ::)

Come on!  Set your agenda aside for just a second give the gut some props for being one of the best in the league.

agenda?  C'mon Redz, as a moderator on the site you should be more respectful of your posters' opinions. This is a personal attack consider this your last warning, and with a name like Brick James I will personally agree that Agenda is the right name to call this, please be carefull with your next comments
Back to the real issue of the thread:  to me, LeBron is not a class act because he has been molded into what he is by forces not his own (in more ways than one, as I alluded to earlier, but that's a subject for another thread).  It's the action one takes in the heat of battle who defines who you really are, not some guided, premeditated media-friendly edited, you can spew after you talk to your publicist.

Thus far in Brick James' career, from what I've seen there is no way I can call him a class act.
« Last Edit: May 18, 2008, 10:24:57 PM by Edgar »
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #34 on: May 18, 2008, 10:21:28 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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Hope I cleared up my point.

-sw

We're not going to see eye to eye hear, but I will concede that the statistical skew applies to everyone.  That said, in my perception LeBron is the king of this; I've never seen someone draw so many fouls initiating contact the way he does (and then whine/pout about it).

Either way thanks for taking the time to reply, eloquently at that.

TP right back at ya.
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #35 on: May 18, 2008, 10:24:24 PM »

Offline Steve Weinman

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Hope I cleared up my point.

-sw

We're not going to see eye to eye hear, but I will concede that the statistical skew applies to everyone.  That said, in my perception LeBron is the king of this; I've never seen someone draw so many fouls initiating contact the way he does (and then whine/pout about it).

Either way thanks for taking the time to reply, eloquently at that.

TP right back at ya.

Fair enough.  Sometimes ya just gotta agree to disagree.

That said, given your latter comment about LBJ, without meaning to hijack the thread, here's my related question for you: How do your feelings about a guy like Dwyane Wade compare to what you've said about James?  Or Kobe?  Just curious on my part.

-sw


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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #36 on: May 18, 2008, 10:25:34 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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OK :-[
« Last Edit: May 18, 2008, 10:41:13 PM by BrickJames »
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #37 on: May 18, 2008, 10:28:58 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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Hope I cleared up my point.

-sw

We're not going to see eye to eye hear, but I will concede that the statistical skew applies to everyone.  That said, in my perception LeBron is the king of this; I've never seen someone draw so many fouls initiating contact the way he does (and then whine/pout about it).

Either way thanks for taking the time to reply, eloquently at that.

TP right back at ya.

Fair enough.  Sometimes ya just gotta agree to disagree.

That said, given your latter comment about LBJ, without meaning to hijack the thread, here's my related question for you: How do your feelings about a guy like Dwyane Wade compare to what you've said about James?  Or Kobe?  Just curious on my part.

-sw

Hey thread hijacking or not, this is a good dialogue - hopefully others are enjoying it.

Great question - I feel like Dwayne is second on this list (I refer to him as "D-whistle") and I really feel that the Mavs were jobbed in the '06 Finals.

I don't think the Kobe treatment is as bad - more comparable to the treatment that Pierce gets.  Those guys are rather high up on the list as well.

That said, I find the Kobe/Pierce treatment more justifiable (as strange as it may sound) given that they were superstars single-handedly carrying the two most storied franchises in the NBA, in rather large markets of course.

I find the LeBron coronation somewhat odd, especially given that (as you know) I am not too impressed with his actual in-game skills. I find someone like Chris Paul or even Brandon Roy much more fun to watch - more team oriented and less questionable shots.
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #38 on: May 18, 2008, 10:39:08 PM »

Offline Steve Weinman

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Hope I cleared up my point.

-sw

We're not going to see eye to eye hear, but I will concede that the statistical skew applies to everyone.  That said, in my perception LeBron is the king of this; I've never seen someone draw so many fouls initiating contact the way he does (and then whine/pout about it).

Either way thanks for taking the time to reply, eloquently at that.

TP right back at ya.

Fair enough.  Sometimes ya just gotta agree to disagree.

That said, given your latter comment about LBJ, without meaning to hijack the thread, here's my related question for you: How do your feelings about a guy like Dwyane Wade compare to what you've said about James?  Or Kobe?  Just curious on my part.

-sw

Hey thread hijacking or not, this is a good dialogue - hopefully others are enjoying it.

Great question - I feel like Dwayne is second on this list (I refer to him as "D-whistle") and I really feel that the Mavs were jobbed in the '06 Finals.

I don't think the Kobe treatment is as bad - more comparable to the treatment that Pierce gets.  Those guys are rather high up on the list as well.

That said, I find the Kobe/Pierce treatment more justifiable (as strange as it may sound) given that they were superstars single-handedly carrying the two most storied franchises in the NBA, in rather large markets of course.

I find the LeBron coronation somewhat odd, especially given that (as you know) I am not too impressed with his actual in-game skills. I find someone like Chris Paul or even Brandon Roy much more fun to watch - more team oriented and less questionable shots.

I have to hand it to you Brick -- you're the first person to ever make me feel like I'm some sort of LeBron apologist (especially since I happen to think Kobe is better, but that's another debate for another time)  ;)

Fair enough about Wade -- just wanted to make sure you would levy the same judgment on him as you do on Bron thanks to the '06 Finals.

I'm not entirely sure I follow the claim about Kobe/Pierce treatment versus LeBron.  Could you elaborate that?  Are you suggesting that it's the "single player carries a team" treatment?  And that Bron isn't worthy of that?  Or does it have to do with the market these guys play in?  If so, what makes that more justifiable?  Is the suggestion here then that PP is more worthy of the star treatment from the zebras than Bron?  Lot of questions to throw at ya, I know...just curious is all.

As far s your comment about being team-oriented, while I love CP3 and Roy, the implication that LBJ isn't team-oriented is another claim with which I'd take issue -- at least so far as his play is concerned.  If you want to go back to the original post and talk about his off-court comments, I'll buy that some of his "global icon" bit along with a few other comments he has made have been rather self-centric.  But as far as his game?  The two aspects of his game almost universally considered to be what make him so unique (although there is plenty of competition; the guys has plenty of assets) are his size and his unselfishness.  He has drawn comparisons to Magic because of the way he sees the floor and is the game's truest point-forward.  If I had Bron's skill set and played with the roster that he does, I think I'd take a few questionable shots from time to time as well, but overall, I think his decision-making is rather commendable to begin with.  Where does your complaint about his level of team-orientation come from?

Thanks again for taking the time to keep coming back to this discussion.  I'm certainly intrigued by it.

-sw


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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #39 on: May 18, 2008, 10:54:26 PM »

Offline dark_lord

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please dont lump that turd in with the rest of us evil dark lords of the sith!  Even we have our limits...thanks ;)

Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #40 on: May 18, 2008, 11:20:04 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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I have to hand it to you Brick -- you're the first person to ever make me feel like I'm some sort of LeBron apologist (especially since I happen to think Kobe is better, but that's another debate for another time)  ;)

Hey, I tend to exaggerate my stance on things to make my point, so I'm glad to hear it's somewhat effective  :)  I too agree that Kobe is a better player than LeBron, but as far as their relative classiness goes, I'm not touchin' that one with a ten foot pole.

Fair enough about Wade -- just wanted to make sure you would levy the same judgment on him as you do on Bron thanks to the '06 Finals.
Nope, I'm an equal opportunity hater :)

I'm not entirely sure I follow the claim about Kobe/Pierce treatment versus LeBron.  Could you elaborate that?
Absolutely.

Or does it have to do with the market these guys play in?  If so, what makes that more justifiable? 

OK, so I've come to appreciate that my opinion here is kind of an odd-ball stance, and tried to convey that with my parenthetical comment earlier ("as strange as it sounds").  Yes, I did mean that the Pierce/Kobe treatment (which for posters not reading the whole thread, I referred to as "comparable") is more justified than the LeBron treatment partly because of not only the size of the market that they play in, but because of the iconic nature of the franchises they play for, combined with the dearth of talent on the those franchises during the time interval in question (circa 2002-2007 AD).

Put yourself in a ruthless business man's shoes for a minute or two.  If you owned a company that was famous for two products, ones that revolutionized your industry, and all of a sudden those products fail to have the market impact that put your company on the map, what would you do?  You couldn't simply get rid of those products, because your customers would lose faith in your brand and you would lose your job.  Could you continue to put out those sub-quality products at the risk of reducing your profit margin, potentially losing your job anyway?  Or would you do whatever you could to try to revive those two products, short of blatantly violating anti-trust or criminal laws?  Even those without graduate business degrees know the answer to that question.

So that begins to explain what I meant by "justifiable"...

Is the suggestion here then that PP is more worthy of the star treatment from the zebras than Bron?  Lot of questions to throw at ya, I know...just curious is all.
Even disregarding my vivid analogy above, YES!, for a couple of reasons.  Maybe I'm wearing green-tinted glasses, but Pierce's game is more "old-school"; thus, as one who considers himself a basketball purist, I sympathize with that.  LeBrick, on the other hand, hoists up an inordinate amount of "questionable" shot attempts.  Yes, Pierce has had his fair share of those as well, but my perception is that LeBron is bailed out more than anyone else in the league.

One thing Pierce, LeBron, and the others who receive "star treatment" do, with regularity, is initiate contact.  I feel that James initiates contact to the point that he can and evidently will severely hurt someone.  He is allowed to virtually barrel through opponents.  Am I holding his athletically ability against him?  Some would argue, yes, but I don't agree.  I do realize that calls like these are legitimately hard to objectively officiate.  I'm going to leave this point at that along with the two following side remarks: (each of which could be threads of their own)
- officials more often than not aren't objectively officiating.  We've already had plenty of hard evidence for this.
- Given the regularity at which adjectives like "freakish", "superhuman" and "other-worldly" are used to describe him, I am not convinced that LeBron's athletic ability is 100% natural.

If you want to go back to the original post and talk about his off-court comments, I'll buy that some of his "global icon" bit along with a few other comments he has made have been rather self-centric.  But as far as his game?
Yes, I made the mistake of openly agreeing with frontierboy in that LeBron is "slightly above average without the attention of the refs", and it detracted from my original point, the point of this thread, which is that he is NOT a class act.  Lesson learned, I guess.

The two aspects of his game almost universally considered to be what make him so unique (although there is plenty of competition; the guys has plenty of assets) are his size and his unselfishness.

Well, now you know I think his size is un-natural, and I don't like the way he is allowed to use it.  You also acknowledged that he is unselfish off the court.  I see it on the court as well.  Going back to frontierboy's point, if he weren't allowed to do the things he does, I don't think he would garner nearly as much defensive attention, and his lack of true ability would brought into the limelight.  Again, we already both know that we are not going to see eye to eye here.

Thanks again for taking the time to keep coming back to this discussion.  I'm certainly intrigued by it.

-sw

You as well.  I know you are an author and I've read some of your pieces.  All I ask is that if you want to use any of these arguments or are inspired by this conversation in your future posts/disseminations, just give me a little shout out.

Thanks
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #41 on: May 18, 2008, 11:29:45 PM »

Offline Bahku

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please dont lump that turd in with the rest of us evil dark lords of the sith!  Even we have our limits...thanks ;)

Yeah, really, Dark Lord! Even Jawas are superior ... he's more on the level of Tusken Raiders, and a Sith wouldn't give Bantha poo-doo for the guy. I'd normally say he should be sacrificed to The Almighty Sarlacc at the Pit of Carkoon, but he'd probably give Sarlacc indigestion.

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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #42 on: May 18, 2008, 11:36:53 PM »

Offline dark_lord

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Darth Stern

please dont lump that turd in with the rest of us evil dark lords of the sith!  Even we have our limits...thanks ;)

Yeah, really, Dark Lord! Even Jawas are superior ... he's more on the level of Tusken Raiders, and a Sith wouldn't give Bantha poo-doo for the guy. I'd normally say he should be sacrificed to The Almighty Sarlacc at the Pit of Carkoon, but he'd probably give Sarlacc indigestion.



LOL!!

although the sarlacc is a more demonic death with the loooong digestion period, i would prefer a front row seat with him in under jabba's palace with the rancor ;)


Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #43 on: May 18, 2008, 11:38:29 PM »

Offline BrickJames

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Guys, I know my Darth Stern comment was pretty funny, but I really don't like the fact that the reply I spent an hour typing is being bumped down by pictures of Star Wars figures...   Kind of discouraging.

Guess I should take the hint huh  :'(
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Re: lebron a class act
« Reply #44 on: May 18, 2008, 11:40:37 PM »

Offline BASSTHUMPER

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dont worry Brick..the force is with u...


i had to man...lol..sorry..