LABron James Discussion: Olympics MVP

Discussion in 'Lakers Discussion' started by therealdeal, Jun 8, 2017.

  1. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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  2. Pioneer10

    Pioneer10 - Lakers All Star -

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    Why are they so concerned about Embiid when AD was not in foul trouble and wasn't exactly cooking?

    Bizarre
     
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  3. KareemtheGreat33

    KareemtheGreat33 - Lakers MVP -

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  4. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    i don't get it at all. embiid handling face up against AD that far from the bucket is ok by me. stay at home until embiid proves he can get buckets at will in that situation.
     
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  5. KuzmoBall17

    KuzmoBall17 - Lakers Starter -

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    BTW LeBron didn't get any rebounds yesterday.Is that some kind of record ?
     
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  6. ZenMaster

    ZenMaster - Lakers All Star -

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    A what now?
     
  7. 432J

    432J - Lakers All Star -

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    first time since 11/2010 that he failed to record a rebound in a game. it's happened two other times and both were in his rookie season
     
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  8. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    Dagger to Kareem’s stomach.

    :LLLLLebronlaughing:
     
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  9. Khmrp

    Khmrp - Lakers Legend -

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    i dont get the double teamming from AD assignment, was happening under vogel too, teams would destroy us on drive n kick n doubling a guy AD could handle himself
     
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  10. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    best i can figure is concern about foul trouble. but again, i'd make that happen first. at very best, embiid converts 3/5 times on two point shots in those scenarios while his teammates get cold. the alternative was a full team shooting 50% on easy three looks.

    i wonder if AD said his injury was going to hurt his lateral movement enough to go to that scheme, and ham is taking the flak for it. i think there's a lot of stuff we don't hear, and it's hard for me to believe that ham is just completely stupid.
     
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  11. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    :LLLLLebronlaughing: ….. in before Zen in 5 -4 -3 -
     
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  12. ZenMaster

    ZenMaster - Lakers All Star -

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    Fire Bacon Pimple Goblin Moron.

    Happy to serve @LTLakerFan
     
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  13. Pioneer10

    Pioneer10 - Lakers All Star -

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    Embiid is a s*** passer who is even worse than AD at handling passes out of double teams but and this is a big but these are about the worse double teams I've ever seen. He's under no pressure of losing the ball and it's not exactly a hard read when the double is coming way early in shot clock and the guys is wide open 5 feet in front of your face.

    This is like looking at analytics without any context of actual basketball
     
  14. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    Not bad old man. Not sure what he has to do to get a whistle out there.

    Good to keep him under 30 minutes.


    This was nice

     
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  15. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    I thought this was a good little read and seems like Darvin handled it well.

    LeBron James needed sunshine after Philly. Darvin Ham brightened L.A.’s day in Detroit
    By Joe Vardon
    Nov 29, 2023

    [​IMG]

    DETROIT — “A lot” needs to change, he’d said.

    “I can only speak for myself — I don’t like it,” he’d added.

    Throughout his storied 21-year career, LeBron James occasionally has done this. There is a bad game, or maybe a slew of them, and he reacts. He has made demands of the front office to change players around him. He has directed his ire toward coaches. Days or even weeks of tension usually follow.

    What happened in Philadelphia to the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday night sparked the above comments. The Lakers lost by 44, the worst margin of defeat James had felt, and he said “a lot” needed to change to make sure no other team beats the Lakers like the Philadelphia 76ers did.

    James didn’t get too specific, but he did cite the 22 3-pointers the Sixers dropped on them versus the Lakers’ seven. “We got killed at the 3-point line,” he said.

    This is old news, bleached and hung out to dry by a captivating In-Season Tournament for the whole league Tuesday, followed by, yes, a 26-point thrashing of the Detroit Pistons on Wednesday that wasn’t as close as the 133-107 score would indicate.

    The Pistons are the NBA’s worst team and have lost 15 in a row. They are not the best measuring stick for determining whether the Lakers made all the changes James brought up the other night.

    “I think we responded well and we played a lot better,” James said after scoring 25 points in Detroit. “We gave ourselves a better chance defensively. We got out to a lot of their shooters that we thought could make shots from the perimeter, but we also controlled the paint. And, you know, that was very key.”



    James’ comments from Monday were understandable — it is appropriate to wipe the egg off one’s face. But they also seemed to lack important context, such as the Lakers’ having beaten the Cleveland Cavaliers last weekend while short-handed to start the trip, then Sunday touring the new LeBron James museum that opened just south of Cleveland.

    James said the sticker shock of being embarrassed in Philadelphia was still with him when he got back to his hotel room Monday night. “It got me a little bit,” he said, but “the next day when we left to come here, it was time to focus on the Pistons.”

    What happened next is what matters most. The Lakers traveled together to Detroit, of course, but otherwise kept to themselves Tuesday. When they convened in the hotel ballroom Wednesday morning for a team meeting, James wasn’t brooding or sullen. And neither was coach Darvin Ham, who used the film session to make several points that were, well, positive.

    His was not a message of change.

    “In my own individual travels, I think that’s the way my life has gone,” Ham said. “Just making the most and getting the most out of any and everything. Even when it was rough times for me as a player, as a coach, it didn’t matter. Just always trying to see the glass half-full. In terms of leading a group as a head coach, I just feel like I’ve been around coaches like that, that dump on their players in a negative way.

    “To me, insults very rarely get you improvement. You try to address the things that you need to get better at but more so focus on the things, the positives, and let guys know it’s OK to fail. Because you don’t want to remain a failure. If you fail after you’ve tried and then you learn things about the first attempt, that’ll hopefully make you successful in your next attempt. You just try to focus on being solution-based.

    “I just never believed in ‘calling guys out’ or insulting guys, dumping on guys negatively. I call the facts, the facts. If that rubs someone the wrong way, then just try not to make the same mistakes.”

    It’s easy for the Lakers to be breathing fresh air now because they did what they were supposed to do against a team whose starters’ average age (21.5 years) is barely older than James’ 21 seasons. If the Lakers had somehow lost (they were never in danger of doing so), the usual alarms that go off when James grows impatient with, say, a Russell Westbrook or a David Blatt or Cavs bench players, would be blaring.

    But the Lakers took care of business in Detroit, and before they did, Ham made some points to them. Points about their winning record despite key injuries to Jarred Vanderbilt, Rui Hachimura and Gabe Vincent. Points about the blocks of success they’ve enjoyed, like perhaps — I don’t know if he said this specifically — their performance in the In-Season Tournament: 4-0, with a home quarterfinal against the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday and a trip to Las Vegas on the line. Ham said there were even positives from the game film of Monday night’s debacle.

    Forty-four-point losses shouldn’t happen, but they do. Michael Jordan’s Washington Wizards were beaten by that many Jan. 16, 2002, when MJ was 38 (the same age as James for his 44-point beatdown). And what Ham was trying to tell the Lakers, James included, was not to make more of one bad night than it was.



    “The biggest thing with (James), he’s a competitor — fierce competitor like myself — and that was a tough one to experience,” Ham said. “I understand his frustrations in terms of suffering a loss like that. But at the end of the day, we’re all … I get frustrated as well, too. Like I told them this morning, there’s going to be lopsided wins, which we’ve been on the right side of, and lopsided losses we’ve suffered. Close wins, close losses: That’s just the nature of the NBA. Especially today’s NBA. Looking around the league and the way some of the numbers … people are scoring the ball top to bottom. It’s been nothing short of amazing. So, the biggest thing is within that frustration, it’s OK to be frustrated because you’re passionate about the game. You can’t get emotional and lose our focus, lose our way. ”

    In what turned out to be a series of light moments Wednesday, Ham began his pregame news conference joking about his freshly trimmed beard. It’s down to a well-groomed goatee.

    “Yeah, man, just following LeBron’s orders — had to change my face,” Ham deadpanned. “I thought he was talking about my beard.”

    Ham made another joke when he was asked about the Pistons, who were the opponent that night and a team Ham played for that won an NBA title in 2004. “I’m just happy we’re not coaching against the team I played on (back then),” he said. “The one I played on … we had seven games holding people under 70 points.”

    If the Lakers had somehow lost Wednesday night, that two-liner, and all the positivity Ham carried into the day, would be a distant memory.

    Also, James is not a predominantly negative person. Not by a long shot. He has played more minutes and scored more points than anyone ever, and he didn’t do it by scowling for 21 seasons. He has carried entire franchises to NBA Finals when they shouldn’t have made it and won titles when he shouldn’t have won them. Countless role players and coaches have been paid millions because of the success they’ve enjoyed with him.

    But on this particular occasion, when a bad game in Philadelphia sent James into one of those dark places he’s been to before, Ham had the self-confidence and wherewithal to bring not just James but all the Lakers back into the light.

    “We just took constructive criticism, and we took it to heart and then we applied it to the game,” James said.
     
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  16. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    Great news for the family and for Bronny.
     
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  17. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    :ADeyeshift:

    Bron, send him off to a foreign country sooner than later.
     
  18. Slick2021

    Slick2021 - Lakers MVP -

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    Gambling is a risky habit. I know
     
  19. PurpleAndGold88

    PurpleAndGold88 - Lakers 6th Man -

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    It’s time to cut LeBron !
     
  20. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    Don't blame him one bit. Hope it's a night we face a lotto team though.

    If it was on the night of the in season tourney and we're in it, I wonder if Silver pushes the game a day or just cries himself to sleep.
     

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