alex42083
Thanks Brandon
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Apparently The King walked off the floor without congratulating any of the Magic players. He didn't even stay to talk to the media.
With all the hoopla next season going to be about LeBron's contract year, do people think he took another step out the door of Cleveland?
The Cavs have a pretty old team with their role players. Mo Williams showed he's not going to bring it in the big time. Ilgauskas got abused down low.
I'm leaning 65-35 right now that LeBron's looking ahead to leaving for the big stage of New York or New Jersey in summer of 2010.
http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/james_leaves_orlando_defeated.html
				
			With all the hoopla next season going to be about LeBron's contract year, do people think he took another step out the door of Cleveland?
The Cavs have a pretty old team with their role players. Mo Williams showed he's not going to bring it in the big time. Ilgauskas got abused down low.
I'm leaning 65-35 right now that LeBron's looking ahead to leaving for the big stage of New York or New Jersey in summer of 2010.
James leaves Orlando defeated, speechless
ORLANDO, Fla. -- LeBron James slipped on a baseball cap, shoved his golden earphones over his ears to block out any noise, and walked out of the visitors' locker room at Amway Arena.
Past the outstretched hands offering him the Game 6 box score that summarized the 103-90 loss to the Orlando Magic.
Past the media that tried to ask him about his 25 points on 8-for-20 shooting, his lowest offensive output of this Eastern Conference finals.
He walked straight to the Cavaliers team bus without offering his insight to the end of the best regular season in franchise history, the team with the league's Most Valuable Player, the Coach of the Year and so much promise.
It was much like the way James walked straight off the court Saturday when the final buzzer sounded without offering a single handshake of congratulations to any Magic players as confetti fell.
This one, clearly, hurt more than the others. Nearly a year removed from leading Team USA to an Olympic gold medal and just weeks from being crowned the league's best player, James added another first to his resume -- the first time he refused to talk to media after a game.
"He'll be all right," Cavaliers guard Mo Williams said. "He'll be all right. That's just drive. This game is only going to make him better, that's all."
Whether it hurt more than other losses for James, not even coach Mike Brown was sure.
"Anytime you see an end to the season, it's going to be tough for anybody," he said.
In the locker room after the loss, James told his teammates they had a great season. No one spoke at length to him, said Williams, who compared James' frustration with a child who didn't get the present he longed for more than any other on Christmas morning.
"We wanted to win, man," Williams said. "Everybody in this room wanted to win and everybody in this room believed we could win. We didn't do it."
Still, James' teammates believe the frustration is something that will only push James to be better.
"I'm 110 percent sure he'll be all right," Williams said.
http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/james_leaves_orlando_defeated.html