Sunday, June 21, 2015

The Chosen One




The Early Years:
Flashback to June 26th, 2003, the NBA Draft. With the number one overall pick the Cleveland Cavaliers took a 6’8”, 18-year old phenom from Akron, Ohio named LeBron James. I was in sixth grade and had really just started to get into basketball and und
erstand the game and I remember watching James in his high school dunk contest and being amazed that someone could jump that high. I saw a couple of those high school showcase games featuring Saint Vincent Saint Mary’s and the amount of talent James had was mind-blowing even for a sixth grader.

I didn’t truly understand what I was witnessing but 12 years later I realize that I was watching the best basketball player since Michael Jordan. But why do we have to label him as the best player since Jordan? Can I not say he’s the greatest of all time without being shunned?

If you think about all the athletes that have entered their respective sport at the age of 17-18 very few of them have had the same hype that James had. A 2002 Sports Illustrated article labeled the 17-year old as, “The Chosen One”. It would be an understatement to say that title carries weight. Very few athletes have had the pressure that James had, but since his first game against the Sacramento Kings, James has carried that weight and done so with ease at times.

It’s ironic that the Cavaliers drafted James; a team that had never sniffed an NBA title drafted him in hopes he would save them and bring that title to a state that looks to Columbus as it’s bread winner. LeBron has always expressed his love for the city of Cleveland as well as his hometown of Akron, a town that’s roughly 45 minutes from Cleveland. He would eventually capture that title, but it was about 1,200 miles south.

The ‘Decision’ Part 1:
In 2010 there was a decision to be made, and it was THE Decision. LeBron James sat on a chair at across from Jim Gray at a Boy’s and Girl’s Club in Connecticut. Was he going to stay in Cleveland? Or would he join forces with Dwyane Wade and fellow free agent Chris Bosh? We all knew the answer and in the now famous words said by James, he would be taking his talents to South Beach and join the Miami Heat. Those words would haunt James until his return four years later.

The option to play college basketball was never a real possibility for James. He was too good and too ready to pass up going to the NBA. The four years he spent in Miami were his “college years” if you really think about it; he needed those years to mature both on and off the court and boy did he ever. Over those four years you saw him emerge from a great player to an all-time great player.

The first year in Miami saw the season end with a bitter Finals defeat at the hands of Dallas Mavericks. The criticism grew and grew and would continue to grow until the following summer when James would lead the Heat to that first title he desperately wanted by knocking off Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder in five games. The next two seasons would see LeBron and the Heat match up with the San Antonio Spurs. The first go around saw the Heat come away with the Larry O’Brien Trophy after Ray Allen hit what was the greatest shot in Miami Heat history. A three pointer with five seconds remaining would send the game to overtime. With the Heat looking to three-peat, and likely the only way LeBron would stay in Miami, San Antonio would dominate the Finals in five games. Exit stage left for LeBron.

The ‘Decision’ Part 2:
Fast-forward to July 11th, 2014, the Sports Illustrated article that would change the city of Cleveland, again. The King announces he is coming home. Coming back to the city that saw him grow up, the city he brought so much life to and so much hope to, and the same the city that saw fans burn his number 23 jersey when he decided to head south for the winters. The city of Cleveland hasn’t seen a championship since 1964, but when LeBron made the announcement to come home and come back to the place that he says his relationship with is “bigger than basketball”, that hope was restored. The jerseys were brought back from the ashes and Cleveland was back on the map.

Many believed that the duo of two number one picks in Kyrie Irving and LeBron James would be enough to get the Cavaliers back to the promise land. But there was another name on the free agent market in the summer of 2014 and his name was Kevin Love. The former first-round pick of the Minnesota Timberwolves decided to join Irving and James for the chance to capture something he hadn’t even known existed while playing in Minnesota, an NBA Championship. The new “Big 3” was created and suddenly it was the Cavs title to lose. Sound familiar?

They started off slow and 39 games into the season David Blatt was already on the hot seat. That seat cooled down quick as the Cavs reeled off 12 straight victories following the subpar start, and although they weren’t the best team in the league the season, many believed the Cavs to be the favorites when it came time for the playoffs to start.

Going into the 2015 NBA Playoffs the Cavaliers were looked at as the favorite with a healthy team, but that quickly changed in the first round against Boston when forward Kevin Love would be lost for the rest of the post season with a shoulder injury. Even without Love the Cavs were still looked at as the favorite. The Cavs pretty much rolled through the playoffs on their way to the Eastern Conference Championship and then onto the NBA Finals.

Game one of the NBA Finals was a loss on many levels; not only did the Cavs lose the game in overtime, but they lost their starting point guard Kyrie Irving. Irving went down late in the game with what would turn out to be a fractured kneecap. Now, like always, it was on LeBron’s shoulders.

The NBA Finals ended in Cleveland but not with a Cavaliers win. Despite LeBron averaging 35 points, 13 rebounds, and 8 assists, the Cavs would lose to the Warriors in six games. It was arguably one of the top Finals performances in NBA history even with it being in a losing effort. The fact that guys like JR Smith, Iman Shumpert, and Matthew Dellavedova missed shot, after shot, after shot, after shot shouldn’t take away from how truly amazing James was. I’m aware of the fact that winning is everything but as a sports fan, we should appreciate how great LeBron James is.

The ongoing opinion, and one that will never end, is that LeBron will never be as good as Michael. The only thing that seems to matter is the titles and James only has two to Jordan’s six. I get that. But I also get the fact that what LeBron is doing and what he’s been doing since he got in the league is something beyond special. An athlete, not just a basketball player, but an athlete like LeBron is so rare, so unique, so misunderstood at times that we are blind to his greatness. He isn’t trying to be the next Michael Jordan, he isn’t trying to be the next Magic Johnson, what he’s trying to do is create his own legacy. His legacy might end up being that he has a losing record in the Finals, but that’s OK. LeBron is such a rare “thing” that we should marvel in overall ability rather than his failures in the Finals.

I’m one of the biggest LeBron supporters there is and I always will be. I’ve watched the tape, I’ve seen the highlights, I’ve heard the arguments and I respect it all in terms of the all-time greats. But if you’re putting a starting five together and LeBron James isn’t in there, you’re stuck in the past and not ready to let go and realize that he is one of the greats.


Wake up people, greatness has arrived.

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