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In the case of LeBron James - it's ok
to pile on........
Photo by
Mark Ralston - AFP
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..........once again, it was the Jason
Terry show
Photo-Mark Ehrmann - Getty
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It’s really hard to discuss the Mets
these days at a time
when all the press and prose is given to LeBron James and Dirk
Nowitzki, the
hated Miami Heat and the hard-working darlings of Dallas.
What a reality show these NBA Finals have
been! (It was the right time for an
exclamation point).
It’s really laughable.
James is just getting smeared all over the place for
not being some kind
of Superman in this Series. He was only
mortal, some would say way too mortal. He
didn’t take over games in the fourth quarter. He
didn’t win the Championship for which he
left Cleveland . His
bravado, his cavalier attitude, his all
too public reveling in his own persona turned out to be unjustified.
No team ever deserved to lose more
than the evil Miami team,
the brain-trust that concocted their grand scheme for a title and the
stars who
pranced about on national TV to announce James’s final decision to
forsake the
utterly forsake-able city of his home town Cleveland.
The Heat lost. James
lost. Wade lost. Bosh
lost. Life is good, very good.
What’s
maybe most
compelling to me in following this maniacal coverage centers around the
word
schadenfreude, a word I had really never seen before but appeared in at
least
two different columns. It means the
taking of joy from someone else’s failures.
And it’s true. Not
since the Yanks lost four straight to the Red Sox have I or this nation
derived
so much giddiness from the failure of others. Never
has there been such universal glee over a
team’s demise and the failure of its
self-proclaimed
superstar.
And no person ever deserved it more. No team ever deserved it more. So it’s okay
to pile on. These people deserve it, slick
Pat Riley, smug Dwayne Wade and the arrogant LeBron James.
The best
part of this
whole thing is that America didn’t see this coming, I didn’t see this
coming
and, best of all, the Heat themselves didn’t see
it coming. They were too good. They
were too
smart, too strong and just too tough. No
team could take them in the clutch. When
push came to shove, in their minds it would be the Miami Heat who would
prevail. And they weren’t bashful about
it, no no, not at all, precious.
On the other side of things is the
perfect counterfoil, if
that’s the word….a really good basketball team, a group of individuals
with a
lot of talent, a lot of experience and a lot of character, a team that
knew how
good they were, a coach who knew how to use all his talent and even a
practically crazed owner who just shut up his incredibly big mouth for
practically the entire season. He didn’t
want to jinx them. How great is that?
In short, no team ever deserved to win
more than this
Mavericks team. Yeah, they had their
superstar too but he had never won anything before, he was too soft, he
was a
European, he was just a shooter who wasn’t even that when the clock was
ticking
down in a big game.
But that European gave away some of
his own money so that owner
Cuban could acquire two perfect role-players that would make them even
tougher,
one Brian Cardinal and an even less notable Ian Mahinmi, a big body,
from
France no less. But even raw 6’11 guys get
noticed and tough 6’8 guys with experience can be a real pain in the
behind.
And then there was Jason Kidd, the
good old guy with all the
smarts on the court, in his prime a real
triple-double guy who played good defense too, a real winner who never
really
won anything unless you count nonsense like the Olympics.
Yeah, Nowitzki and Kidd were the names
everybody knew but an
old fantasy player like myself knew and took note of some of these
other Mavs
players even before the season started, starting with Jason Terry, who
was just
great all year but who still hadn’t been touted much outside of Dallas,
but
also including Shawn Marion, who had always been one of the better
all-around
forwards in the league.
I had both
these
players on my winning fantasy squad and they were two real values. Another player I would have liked was center
Tyson
Chandler, always under-rated as he’s one of those guys who always
played much
better than his stat-line would indicate.
So I took notice of this Dallas team
early on in the season
but still was surprised that they beat the Lakers.
I thought the Mavs were too small to take the
Lakers. And I wouldn’t have put money
down that they’d ever beat the Heat.
Hadn’t the NBA always rewarded the
star system? Hadn’t the existence of 2
superstars on the
same team always practically guaranteed success? Think
Jordan and Pippen, think Magic and
Kareem , think Kobe and Shaq (who beat Kidd in 2003). Wasn’t
it pretty much a lock that the stars
would be rewarded again? Hadn’t the Heat just beaten the 3-starred
Celtics of
Pierce, Garnett and Allen?
After Game 3, when the Heat recaptured
their home court
advantage, I thought the Mavs might be done. I
expected the Heat to win each successive contest. The
Mavs win in Game 4 was a relief but their
backs were against the wall. Their
always fateful Game 5 win was a joy but
even then, I thought they had to go back to Miami and could easily lose
two
there.
I told myself the Mavs had to win Game
6, a Game 7 in Miami
would be just impossible. But they did
indeed take Game 6. Once again, it was
the Jason Terry show while LeBron seemed to disappear.
Wade was great throughout.
LeBron was not. He
couldn’t drive to the basket. He couldn’t
shoot. He found out there are missing
elements to his game. And brand.
And that’s best of all.
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