<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Mr. J @ Dec 26 2007, 12:39 AM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (cpawfan @ Dec 25 2007, 11:55 PM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>First, why in the hell is the Izod center constantly mentioned when talking about Brooklyn? Izod is the piece of shit in the Meadowlands.</div>
I didn't know about the new arena. Barclays is still a crappy name.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>Second, Jizzy is Jizzy. The sooner you learn that and don't take his ramblings for all Nets fans, the better off you'll be.</div>
I'll take that into consideration next time. I don't really know anyone except for Kidd.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>Third, MSG does have history and name that still means something, but as far as amenities go, it is not a top NBA areana. Barclays will be world class inside and out.</div>
So what will the new amenities mean? What will LeBron now be able to do? Regardless of how new their facilities are, it won't make it more appealing than the Mecca of hoops.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>Fourth, the Nets have already demonstrated that they can push the Knicks out of the main focus on the New York media.</div>
What? The Knicks are never not the main focus of the media. It's probably the opposite. They make a living off Isiah and his shenanigans.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>Fifth, LBJ grew up in Akron, not Cleveland and there is a real difference</div>
There is a real difference. Brooklyn represents a part of a city. The Knicks represent everything. Are you really suggesting the LeBron will garner as much media attention, recognition, hype, appeal, etc. playing in Brooklyn than the Knicks?
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I'm going to work from the third point down.
1. The amenities will mean more skyboxes, which will/have been all sold out by 2010. The amenities of MSG will be incomporable to those of the Barclays Center in 2010, just as they are now compared to the brand new Prudential Center in Newark in 2007.
And it's not just amenities. It's architecture. It's style. Anyone who's ever seen a Frank Gehry project up close or even on the internet knows it's something special. Now Gehry is designing an NBA arena. You don't have to have a degree in architecture, you can just look at the images and realize that this arena will be special.
2. When Kidd and his wife went through a nasty public divorce last January, who was on the front page of the Post, the Slime (Times), and the Daily News?
3. If they are still losing, absolutely. First of all what cpaw was trying to say was that Akron and Cleveland are not the same city. LeBron was drafted by the Cavaliers, in his home state, but that's not his hometown. He's connected to Ohio by birth, but he's a lot like Bruce, he was Born to Run. By that I mean if the money is right, he'll go to New York or Los Angeles. Dave D'Alessandro from the Star-Ledger said it himself that the folks in Cleveland are absolutely scared of LeBron leaving them, they'll do just about everything to keep him.
Second of all, you make it seem like the Knicks being in Manhattan makes them represent the other three boroughs, Long Island, and Westchester exclusively, as if a team in Brooklyn couldn't do the same. Even if that was true, which it isn't, if removed from NYC, Brooklyn's population alone would make it the third largest city in America. Nets alone could draw fans from Brooklyn and do just fine. Brooklyn isn't exactly equal to Staten Island or Queens, and you know that. I know that, and I'm from North Jersey.