2020 Lakers were created in LeBron’s image, after a patient wait

LeBron James arriving in Los Angeles was even met with skepticism from some Lakers fans, but there is no doubt the title team was led by him.

LeBron James led the Los Angeles Lakers to a championship and has now earned the adoration of Lakers fans. But it wasn’t always easy for everyone. Eventually, LeBron created a championship team in his image by also realizing that he could let go of some things he would have otherwise felt the need to control. It was through learning from his past experiences that he was able to lead the most dominant championship team he has ever been a part of. But before, we talk about this season, I want to take it back to just before LeBron joined the Lakers.

I’m far from a regular at All-Star Weekend, but the 2018 All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles, only a few months before LeBron would eventually join the Lakers, felt too important to pass up. And I had to get around, so I would ride in ride-shares, with the discussion often turning to All-Star weekend, before I would eventually bring up LeBron and the Lakers. I was already editing this site and the prospect of LeBron in Los Angeles, particularly after Kyrie Irving left Cleveland, was always in my LeBron Thought Process. I had also gone to an UNINTERRUPTED event during the weekend and frankly, all of the signs that he was going to be a Laker were there to see for all who were there. So I would often ask Lakers fans when I met them what they thought about adding LeBron. Most were stoked, but many were skeptical. The most skeptical of them all drove me in a ride-share, which stuck with me much more than any of the Cool Kid Conversations you can have at places like All-Star Weekend.

The passionate Laker fan behind the wheel, taking me back to my friend’s place in Playa Del Rey, insisted that above all else, he did not want LeBron James to be on one-year contracts like he was with the Cavaliers. He needed LeBron to commit to the Lakers and stop putting his thirst for personal power above the team. Upon arrival, he signed a 4-year deal, taking a first step in letting go of some of his power but laying the foundation for a more stable work environment.

But that goodwill with Lakers faithful was quickly erased as it became clear the young Lakers were soon to be the pieces to bring in LeBron’s preferred running mate, Anthony Davis. That move, was, in fact, for the goodwill of the franchise, but it hurt. In between, LeBron had to acquiesce some power to the Lakers brand, Jeanie Buss, Linda Rambis, and eventually, Rob Pelinka and Frank Vogel.

Rather than extract power in an adversarial fashion, LeBron and Rich Paul built bridges. LeBron organized a team mini-camp in Las Vegas before training camp, helping create the bonds that would be fortified when they were locked inside various Ritz-Carlton’s in China, watching decals featuring them get torn down while they were watching. Back in November, Danny Green said the team’s trip to China helped create a unity that he had not experienced before in his career.

Klutch, too, built bridges with the Lakers family. During the stoppage, Klutch hired agent Omar Wilkes to run their Basketball Division as Rich Paul moved to be the CEO of the company. It is likely no coincidence that Wilkes is the son of 80s Lakers Legend Jamaal Wilkes. Nobody wins when the family feuds, which is something both Klutch and the Lakers had to learn over the years. It’s something the Clippers are still learning.

LeBron’s leadership, after being a somewhat distant mentor to the younger Lakers last season, helped create the most dominant champion he has ever been on. When you look at the defense, playoff record, and the duo of LeBron and Anthony Davis, LeBron has never been a part of a team that was this good. And perhaps as a reflection of his own growth, LeBron created the most dominant team he’s ever been on.

In Miami, the Big 3 aura was inescapable and while they were together, it was always filled with immense pressure and an exploding social media age. In Cleveland, the Cavaliers era was defined by cliques. And while there were definitely groups who hung together or did different things, LeBron helped cultivate a culture in which everyone was together more often than not. It resulted in his best team.

With the 2019-20 Lakers, LeBron would organize team meals, a page he took from San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich. LeBron’s group chat messages to the squad have become detail fodder for every writer in the bubble and the Madden tournament was not only a great piece of content but a competition that the Lakers could all participate in to keep them occupied while they were quarantined with each other for the first 2 months of their stay.

In terms of accomplishments, the 2016 Championship over the Golden State Warriors after going down 3-1 will never be topped. But in terms of which team was the most dominant? The 2020 Lakers, in large part to the excellence of LeBron’s moves, both ones he influenced and ones he let happen naturally by simply letting things play out, were his best team yet.

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Boston Celtics alumni in the 2020 NBA Finals: Game 4 results

It was a rough shooting night for all three Boston Celtics alumni playing in the 2020 NBA Finals.

It wasn’t a good night for former Boston Celtics in the 2020 NBA Finals by any measure.

None of the three Celtics alumni still in the bubble playing for either the Miami Heat or Los Angeles Lakers had a good game, and for us fans back home, the thought of the Lakers pulling even with Boston in total title count isn’t exactly a pleasant thought either.

Los Angeles took a two-game lead in the series as they went up three games to one with their 102 – 96 win over the Heat behind big games from LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

But, we know you aren’t here to read about their successes, so let’s take a look at how former Celtics did in Game 4 of the Finals.

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NBA Finals: Former Warrior Andre Iguodala adds seven points off bench in Heat vs. Lakers Game 2

In game two of the NBA Finals between the Heat and the Lakers, ex-Warrior Andre Iguodala scored seven points in 25 minutes off the bench.

While the Golden State Warriors are busy with their voluntary offseason minicamp inside the Bay Area “Dubble,” the crop at the NBA’s Orlando Bubble has been narrowed down to a pair of teams.

As the Warriors streak of five consecutive appearances in the NBA Finals has officially ended, the Los Angeles Lakers have linked against the Miami Heat in the league’s championship series.

During the NBA Finals, Warriors Wire is highlighting former members of Golden State at Disney World. Ex-Warriors Andre Iguodala, JaVale McGee and Quinn Cook will be on display during the Finals.

After Los Angeles jumped out to a 1-0 series lead, Iguodala logged 25 minutes for Erik Spoelstra‘s squad in game two. Golden State’s former sixth man tallied seven points on 3-of-3 shooting from the field with two rebounds and an assist off the bench.

Via @MiamiHEAT on Twitter:

To add to Iguodala’s numbers, both Kelly Olynyk and Kendrick Nunn recorded strong performances off the bench. Olynyk scored his 2020 playoff-high with 24 points on 9-of-16 shooting from the field. The former Gonzaga big man buried a trio of jumpers from outside the 3-point line. Nunn added 13 points on 3-of-7 shooting from the field.

However, steady efforts from Jimmy Butler, Tyler Herro and Miami’s bench unit, the Heat couldn’t make up for the injury absence of Bam Adebayo and Goran Dragic.

On the Lakers way to a 124-114 game two win, Anthony Davis and LeBron James combined for 65 points. Each Los Angeles All-Star surpassed 32 points and nine rebounds in the boxscore. Frank Vogel opted not to play both McGee and Cook.

Down 2-0, Iguodala and the Heat will match up with the Lakers on Sunday in a must-win contest at 4:30 P.M. PT.

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As Rockets head to Florida, P.J. Tucker plans for ’90 day road trip’

That 90-day period referenced by Tucker lasts into October, when the only NBA teams still playing will be those in the NBA Finals.

The Houston Rockets are set to arrive at the NBA’s restart location in Florida on Thursday night, and veteran defensive ace P.J. Tucker says on Instagram that he’s packing for a “90-day road trip.”

That time period would stretch well into October, and the only NBA teams still playing at that point would be those in the NBA Finals. The Rockets haven’t been there since winning their last NBA title in 1995.

Led by an All-Star backcourt of former MVPs James Harden and Russell Westbrook, these Rockets (40-24) certainly have the talent to make Tucker’s prediction a reality. It all starts with Thursday’s arrival, followed by Saturday’s practice ⁠— which will be their first as a team since this season’s March 12 hiatus due to COVID-19.

The Rockets are currently scheduled to depart Houston at 5:00 p.m. local time on Thursday and arrive in Orlando about two hours later.

While the vast majority of Houston’s traveling party (including players and coaches) will be on Thursday’s flight, it may not be everyone. For example, anyone who has recently tested positive for COVID-19 will not be cleared to enter the NBA’s bubble site until they have negative tests.

Rockets forward Thabo Sefolosha, who opted out of playing in Florida, said some of his teammates had tested positive for the coronavirus. However, he did not identify who, how many, or at what time. Thus, it’s possible that those players are already recovered and testing negative.

There could also be other reasons for not being on the team charter. The Los Angeles Clippers, for example, are reportedly allowing superstar Kawhi Leonard to arrive a few days late while dealing with a family matter. The NBA is requiring anyone not on the team charters to test negative three times for COVID-19 before traveling to Orlando.

For Houston, the journey begins with Thursday’s flight. We should learn shortly after their arrival whether anyone will be delayed.

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Daryl Morey has a hilarious reason for Rockets’ championship destiny

“This is why the Rockets are destined to win this year,” Morey wrote on Twitter. “Houston championships always get an asterisk.”

It’s become something of a running joke in Houston that championships aren’t won without various skeptics having “what if?” scenarios.

After three straight titles by the Chicago Bulls, the Rockets claimed their two NBA crowns in 1994 and 1995 following Michael Jordan’s unexpected mid-career retirement in October 1993. Many critics have wondered if they’d have won those, had Jordan kept playing. (Jordan did come out of retirement midway through Houston’s second championship season.)

And while Major League Baseball’s Houston Astros won their first World Series title in 2017, some have since questioned whether they would have won it without illegally stealing signs.

So with some NBA analysts such as Shaquille O’Neal alleging that a 2020 NBA champion — assuming the suspended season resumes, of course — would carry an unofficial asterisk, why not add this title to the city’s list? That’s the perspective that Rockets GM Daryl Morey is adopting.

Jokes aside, it’s certainly true that the 2020 NBA playoffs — should they occur — will look very unusual. They would almost certainly occur without fans in empty arenas, and after an extended multi-month layoff late in the regular season due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. That’s not the way the league’s champion is usually decided.

Then again, all teams are facing the same circumstances. Rockets guard Austin Rivers recently argued that given those factors, it would be the “hardest championship ever won.” Here’s what he said:

People have been saying, whoever wins, it’s going to have a blip [asterisk] next to it. I personally believe it’s the complete opposite. Whoever wins, this is so much harder. … Whoever wins this year really had to go get it and earn it, and had guys who took time off seriously and still stayed in shape, and was able to get back the chemistry, true chemistry. So many things. In my eyes, whoever wins this, it’s going to be the hardest championship ever won.

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The first step, of course, is getting the 2019-20 season back up and running. From there, any NBA champion to emerge would be thrilled to have the opportunity to hold that debate.

Considering Houston’s history, it would somehow feel fitting if this was the year for this generation’s Rockets — currently led by Morey, James Harden, Russell Westbrook, and head coach Mike D’Antoni — to finally have their long-awaited championship breakthrough.

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Report: Tournament-type event in Las Vegas only way to have NBA playoff

Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix reports all of the teams are aware that the playoffs as planned will not happen to crown a 2020 champ.

With the United States experiencing record unemployment and most of daily life has come to a halt or at the very least transferred to the virtual realm, the National Basketball Association remains hopeful that they can do something to crown a 2020 NBA Champion. However, the league is pretty clear across the board that nothing resembling an NBA postseason will be able to happen, even if conditions greatly improve during the coronavirus.

The best-case scenario is a one-location, tournament-type event that crowns a champion in Las Vegas, according to Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix.

The spread of COVID-19 would have to dip significantly in the coming months, or the NBA will be accused of prioritizing profits over safety. Said a high ranking team executive from a playoff team, “We all want to play. But we all know we can’t play until things are dramatically different.”

So even if hospitals get the proper amounts of masks and ventilators and tests, and the population at large takes social distancing seriously to slow the spread of coronavirus, the playoffs as we were expecting them will not happen. And there’s still a good chance that nothing happens at all and the season gets canceled in the way that college sports have been. That’s been made even more clear by moves by cities like Toronto, home of the defending NBA Champions, which banned public gatherings of people until July 1. Wimbledon, the iconic summer tennis tournament in London, was also canceled earlier this week.

Still, even an event at a central location, as Wimbledon is, with significantly fewer participants than a potential NBA tournament, would be quite complicated. The NBA tends to fly in their personnel to playoff sites from all over the country, meaning that not only would the players have to be tested and quarantine, so would any of the working staff who are taking care of the clock, gathering quotes or keeping score. That type of expenditure may prove to be too much, but the NBA is a multi-billion dollar business and it’s unlikely they will spare any expense in making sure they’re still worth it.

LeBron James has already declared that he has no interest in playing in such a scenario, both without fans and having to live quarantined in a hotel away from his family. But if that’s the only way to finish the season, that will be LeBron’s only opportunity, as well as that of every other team in the playoff picture, to claim the 2020 championship. And perhaps more importantly to the rest of the league, another opportunity to cash some portion of their paychecks for the rest of the season.

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