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LeBron James

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There were a ton of outside influences that had an impact on last night's game. Most will decrease immediately, some we will get used to and some we won't see again until the end of the season. It was a total circus down there...just complete chaos. I knew we might be in trouble the moment i arrived. Everyone, including the owners, Griff and poor Tad were running around like chickens with their heads cut off. Everyone was worried about "the event". Gilbert wanted it to be unlike anything anyone had ever seen. To his credit it was, but it also had massive negative impacts on the most important thing - the game. Everyone was scurrying around worried about tickets, seating, media, VIP's, celebrities and athletes from other sports. There was just a shitload of distractions and an overload of hype. Former players and celebs were hanging around places they shouldn't have been. The players should have been more isolated in my opinion, but that was tough to do considering the unusual circumstances. It was also a wildly emotional and pressure filled night for everyone too, most of all for Lebron. So am i surprised that he/they lost focus, played nervous and didn't play very well? Not at all. I'm glad it's over. I said it earlier that i think we will start out 2-3. That will be a good thing in my opinion. The unreasonable expectations will be gone, we will settle in, we will jell and start winning a lot of games...if we can stay healthy.

The ticker tape parade and massive celebration came before the game last night. I understand why, but it had negative consequences. No big deal. Now let's move on, get some chemistry going and focus on just basketball.
 
I honestly think he looked a little "spent" too. Not in the sense where it could be something that lingers, but LeBron's been on an emotional rollercoaster over the past 4 months. From free agency, to returning to Cleveland, to the homecoming party in Akron, to media day, to the first scrimmage, to the first preseason game, to the game in Brazil against Miami, to the event leading up to opening night, to opening night itself.

Oh yeah, on top of all that, his wife was in her third trimester through all of this and JUST gave birth a few days ago.

I wouldn't be surprised or disappointed if the last few months have been overwhelming for him. He obviously wanted to put on a show last night and was in his own head. I don't think he is physically spent, but I think he may have been emotionally drained.
 
Hopefully, he'll play better tonight. The Bulls play at a slow tempo and force teams to score low points. I want him to have a great game, but i don't think it will happen tonight.
 
Please, for the love of God, never post a video with Skip Bayless on this site again.

I know what reputation both of them have.
But actually, it wasn't about Skip, it was about the observations of Stephen A. Smith. I think you don't have to categorically dismiss all of their opinions/arguments just because...
In fact, he was at the game and he just told us what he saw in the pregame warmups. I wasn't at the game, so it is not up to me to judge him on this.
 
Just as kind of a throwback, I like the new LeBron commercials (both the one with Hozier and the Nike spot) but this is still my favorite LeBron commercial of all time. It's from a long time ago, but it gives me chills and I think it's actually a deep message.

 
I honestly think he looked a little "spent" too. Not in the sense where it could be something that lingers, but LeBron's been on an emotional rollercoaster over the past 4 months. From free agency, to returning to Cleveland, to the homecoming party in Akron, to media day, to the first scrimmage, to the first preseason game, to the game in Brazil against Miami, to the event leading up to opening night, to opening night itself.

Oh yeah, on top of all that, his wife was in her third trimester through all of this and JUST gave birth a few days ago.

I wouldn't be surprised or disappointed if the last few months have been overwhelming for him. He obviously wanted to put on a show last night and was in his own head. I don't think he is physically spent, but I think he may have been emotionally drained.

I generally just think LeBron didnt get to put much time in on the court this summer so he might be a bit off for a few weeks as he gets back into it.
 
Woj:

How LeBron is wielding an influence never before seen in the NBA

CLEVELAND – In the uneasy moments lurching toward tipoff, the neatly manicured mythology of LeBron James’ homecoming flickered on the spectacular screen suspended over the Q Arena floor. All around, the shoe company’s commercial played out with thousands upon thousands of Clevelanders surrounding the prodigal son in the Cavaliers’ huddle, thousands more reaching out, across blocks and streets, responding to the superstar’s declarations of duty about winning a championship for them.

No one does fairy tales like Nike, an unapologetic peddling of product for a summer transaction. The most conditional kind of love washed down onto James upon his Cavaliers return on Thursday night, Northeast Ohio determined to distill romance out of something that was far more a free-agent power play than the storybook journey home that it’s been framed.

For James’ genius standards, this was a flat, flawed debut – an abysmal performance born of nerves and newness. The Cavaliers lost to the New York Knicks, and James had never looked so pressed and uneasy. From eight turnovers to missing eight of nine shots to start, even the sprawling hype of this night overwhelmed a four-time MVP and two-time champion. This is a new pressure, and for a night anyway, it was palpable.

“This was great, but I’m glad it’s over,” James said.

Yes, James loves this region, but give him this too: The world’s best basketball player is testing the reach of the iconic athlete into athletic and coaching representation, pursuing power and control that no active athlete’s ever dared.

His childhood friend-turned agent, Rich Paul, oversees Klutch Sports, a Cleveland-based agency that exists out of the generosity of its financial benefactor, LeBron James. These are James’ resources and might behind the company, but he lets his buddies run it. Klutch represents Cavaliers forward Tristan Thompson, who has a decided advantage as a James underling to negotiate a better-than-market value deal with the Cavaliers.

As much as anything, James has set up Rich Paul with a sweet gig: Paul doesn’t negotiate the contracts for clients, nor does he do the marketing for LeBron James. Those jobs belong to Mark Termini and the Fenway Sports Group, respectively. Nevertheless, Paul is the personable frontman, the secondary recruiter behind James himself.

As the season unfolds, the Klutch Sports client most are watching closest is deposed Golden State coach Mark Jackson. He has bounced agent to agent in his brief coaching career, but landing with Paul raised the suspicions of Jackson’s motives: Does Jackson think Paul can simply wedge him into the Cavaliers’ job?

Most believe that James is too smart to ever want a coach who spends far more time retweeting Twitter praise for himself than preparing his basketball team
, but Jackson shouldn’t be underestimated as one of the sport’s great self-promoters. And make no mistake: If the Cavaliers struggle, it won’t be James and Kevin Love taking the blame. It’ll be coach David Blatt, who understands – even embraces – the burden.

After the loss on Thursday, Blatt was disappointed but hardly discouraged on the walk back to his office. “I’ve been preaching patience on this team all along, but I understand that it can be hard for people to accept it,” Blatt told Yahoo Sports. “Anyway, we can play a hell of a lot better than that.” Asked if this kind of opening-night loss amid the anticipation had felt like a kick in the stomach, he said, “It was for me, for everybody – and that could be a good thing for all of us.”

Even so, Blatt stopped and smiled. All these stops in the world, Princeton to Israel to Russia, and this was the kind of night, on the kind of stage, that he had forever dreamed: “It was special,” Blatt told Yahoo. “Just incredibly special …”

When James and the Miami Heat were barely over .500 to start his Heat career, he tried to take on Erik Spoelstra – only to have management support the coach. The Cavaliers could be 0-2 by late Friday in Chicago – and still be on the way to 60 victories and a ticket to the Eastern Conference Finals. Blatt is nothing if not supremely confident, prepared and convinced he’ll find a way to get the best out of everyone on his basketball team.

In the end, James will make the ultimate call in Cleveland, but remember something: He doesn’t have the leverage with a one-year contract that people want to believe. He committed to a short contract so he could cash into that new television booty, but whatever is threatened for the sake of leverage – directly or indirectly – James can’t leave Cleveland again. His image, his brand, couldn’t survive the fallout. Once James returned, make no mistake: he signed a lifetime contract with the Cavaliers. This time, it’s in blood.

Only one thing had changed from when James had left the Cavaliers four years ago: This time, he had two championships. Once you’ve won, everything is easily explained away. His free-agent performance this summer wasn’t so much different than 2010, only seen through a new prism. James empowered Paul to drag several teams to Klutch’s offices in Cleveland for free-agent presentations without the free-agent star present. Once those meetings were over, leaked to the public, the teams sheepishly realized: We were had.

“Just used as props to get attention and publicize their business,” one league executive told Yahoo Sports. “Maybe that’s smart to some people, but you have to deal with the same people again and again in this league. Those things can come back on you eventually.”

It won’t be soon, because LeBron James is running Cleveland again, running the NBA. Everyone still wants this LeBron James story to read like a fairy tale, but it’s something else, something different. This is business, and for now, business is good.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/how-le...e-never-before-seen-in-the-nba-165754734.html

So glad Woj put out there that LeBron is here for the duration of his career. Myself & Sandusky are among those that have been trying to tell everyone that was the case, but am glad it's been said by a reputable national writer.
 
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So...I guess he found his HGH?

Last night was obviously a circus that, as Max said, negatively impacted the team. This was more of a playoff type atmosphere, and LeBron showed up in a big way.
 
Lebron definitely should sit some games out if he needs to. The lift just isn't there. Put him on the Duncan minutes limit maybe? No more than 33 in a game?
 
85 minutes in the past two days.

I understand there was overtime tonight, but we need to get the minutes in check here.
 
I'm getting really exhausted reading this new narrative.. LeBron scored nearly 40 points tonight. WTF are you talking about?

Edit- not to Soar, whom I agree with. The minutes must decrease.
 
Lebron definitely should sit some games out if he needs to. The lift just isn't there. Put him on the Duncan minutes limit maybe? No more than 33 in a game?

I agree LeBron should sit out games, but I very much disagree his lift isn't there. LeBron is nearly 30, a much more experienced and wise vet...he knows what he's doing. He's not going to fly around like he did in 05, when he was basically Superman on the court. He's conserving energy and trying to save himself for later in the year, so his body doesn't betray him like it did at the end of last season.
 
LeBron was pretty damn good tonight...too lazy to check stats ... not sure why people are freaking still.
 

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