AFTER the Cleveland Cavaliers’ incredible comeback win, from 3-1 down in the finals against the Golden State Warriors, LeBron James altered the course of history in so many ways.
First of all, there’s bringing home a major North American championship back to Cleveland. Something not seen in this parts since Jim Brown led the Cleveland Browns to the 1964 National Football League title over Johnny Unitas and the Baltimore Colts. Second, it’s coming back from being down 3-1 to win; a first in the championship round. And third, it’s winning a game seven on the road; something not achieved in the National Basketball Association (NBA) since the 1978 Washington Bullets upended the Seattle Supersonics at the Seattle Center Coliseum.
Fourth, there’s James pacing both teams for this NBA Finals in scoring, rebounding, assists, steals and blocks! He is the first and probably will be the last player to accomplish that achievement.
Perhaps, one of the biggest alterations is how the Game Seven win moves LeBron James away from Wilt Chamberlain. Not that being compared to Wilt is bad. While Chamberlain is one of the all-time NBA greats, for all his prodigious scoring talent and numerous NBA records, isn’t regarded as a winner. Why? Because he only won two championships in his six finals appearances. He was said to be a player who didn’t win often enough, wasn’t mentally strong or tough, and didn’t make the key play in the clutch. Something that James has been criticized for and, thus, being mentioned in the same breath as the Big Dipper.
On his seventh trip to the NBA Finals, LeBron James has come away as a winner for the third time. This is his first away from Miami so people cannot say that he cannot win without Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. Well, he did have Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love, who rescued his reputation with his performance in Game Seven after a subpar series. But Michael did have Scottie and Dennis so it’s all square.
A triple double with the title on the line? And on the road? LeBron James is a winner.
With the championships with Miami and Cleveland, LeBron joins a list of players who have won titles with different franchises: Robert Horry and John Salley won with three teams. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Dennis Rodman, Ron Harper, Slater Martin, Steve Kerr, Horace Grant, Pep Saul, Robert Parish, Shaquille O-Neal, Will Perdue, Clyde Lovellette, Dennis Johnson, Gerald Henderson, Jamaal Wilkes, James Edwards, Mario Elie, Paul Silas, Sam Cassell, Arnie Risen, Bill Walton, Bob Dandrige, Charles Johnson, Earl Cureton, James Posey, Lindsey Hunter, Mitch Kupchak, Wally Walker, Walt Davis and Wilt Chamberlain.
Almost immediately after the end of Game Seven, Las Vegas oddsmakers have pegged the Golden State Warriors of winning next year’s NBA championship. They may very well achieve that. But do you think LeBron James is finished? I think he isn’t done by a long shot. The question now is, what other ghosts is he chasing on his way to the Hall of Fame?
Am looking forward to next.
1 comment
LeBron is good, but nobody – not James, not Jordan, not Magic – are even in the same league with in-their-primes Kareem or Wilt; it isn’t even the same sport! When Kareem’s Bucks won the title in 1971, he AVERAGED 36 points and nearly 17 rebounds per game during the regular season. The NBA didn’t even count blocked shots until after Wilt had retired, he would have – thereby – AVERAGED triple doubles; these stats in a SEVENTEEN TEAM league.
Only young people who never had the opportunity to see the greatest players – Wilt, Kareem, Maravich, Hayes, Walton – play in their primes come up with this codswallop, and they’ll never understand the “Dominating Big-Man” dynamic; people who didn’t have that chance, cannot possibly understand. Davis in New Orleans lives up to his potential, you’ll get a glimpse….