Shooter
Unanimously Great
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2008
- Messages
- 5,484
- Likes
- 152
- Points
- 63
He looked like a man who had gotten to the altar on his wedding day and realized he was marrying the wrong woman.
Nervous. Despondent. Sorrowful. This is how LeBron James came across on the day that was supposed to be filled with joy. Imagine how he’ll look when he realizes exactly what his decision will bring.
He has ensured that the old cliché “you can’t go home again” will literally apply to him, since he is nothing more than Art Modell in baggy shorts to the Cleveland fans who once adored him.
He has guaranteed a venomous reception the next time he steps foot in midtown Manhattan ... or Chicago ... or Los Angeles ... or Newark ... or every arena north of Miami.
He has transformed his image from a universally worshiped superstar to a bicoastal basketball villain, one who better win a championship or six if he ever hopes to change that back.
And, while it will be largely overlooked, his nine words — “I’m going to take my talents to South Beach” – have effectively ended New Jersey’s frustrating and fruitless dalliance with professional basketball.
Maybe most of all, this was a sickening episode for sports in general. James was the architect of the biggest me me me moment in the history of pro sports, with ESPN as an eager accomplice.
The network gave up whatever shred of credibility it had with Jim Gray milking this moment with question after question before asking the only one that mattered. Even James looked uncomfortable, sitting there with an audience of kids turned into props for the occasion.
There were too many cringe worthy moments to list, but one stood out. James, asked about the reaction in Cleveland, actually said the fans there “can have mixed emotions of course.”
Mixed? Oh, they’ll be well sorted, big guy. He has no clue what this decision — and how it was handled — is going to do for his image across the country, not just in his home state.
http://www.nj.com/nets/index.ssf/2010/07/politi_lebron_james_is_big_los.html#incart_hbx

