Who You Creepin'?

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

...Pro athletes don't care about sports...

I've mentioned this a few times to people, but the 2003 loss in the ALCS at the hands of Aaron Boone and the NY Yankees devastated me. I went into a self proclaimed 24 hour vow of silence, shirking work responsibilities and listening to the radio to make sure someone else was feeling the same pain as me. It was crushing, heartbreaking, horrible.

Then a few days later I realized that was completely insane, and I came back to real life. My love for the Red Sox, and a lot of other professional teams, went more from a personal one to a newly developed business version. I sorta started to get interested in approaching sports from a much different angle, and with my line of work I was able to dive head first into the Darren Rovell CNBC Sports Business side of things.

I am 100% sure that's why I'm so interested in contract situations - even while the game is being played, and the C's are in the middle of what was almost a historic championship run, I'm thinking about how they will retain Kendrick Perkins long term, and more acutely I'm thinking about where LeBron would end up.

I think it's safe to say LeBron was distracted completely by the business side of things - hence his early exit. LeBron is a child. LeBron's situation was honestly a bit terrifying for him. He reminded me of the lead character in Dazed & Confused while he was pitching at his Pony League game the night of the last day of school. He wanted to win & get the hell out of there. While LeBron didn't end up throwing the strikeout to end the game, he certainly did his best to bolt out the outfield fence, while Dan Gilbert was waiting there with a FAH-Q wooden paddle.

LeBron bolted, and Cleveland fans are uproarious. As far as I can tell, there are 5 different categories of those who have an emotion about Lebron.

1. People who don't live in either Cleveland or Miami, but are NBA fans, and are just generally sickened by the way he made his selection and referred to himself in the 3rd person, consistently. I'll come back to this point.

2. People who don't live in either Cleveland or Miami, and are not fans of the NBA, and generally hate it when athletes are rich (despite the fact that they ignorantly pump money into these leagues buy buying merchandise, reading magazine articles, calling Sports Talk stations, etc...) . These folks I don't have time for. Shut up. Yes, other people are rich, get over it.

3. People who live in Cleveland and are genuinely hurt by LeBron's actions, not because he left, but because of the way he left. Bill Simmons has said much about this, and I don't need to expand, but the grandstanding and the decision to pick the prettier city in a fashion like this really could be hurtful to those who haven't gone through the same catharsis I went through in the Fall of '03.

4. People who live in Cleveland and are maniacs who think LeBron should be tethered to his hometown city simply because they think that is how it should be. These are the folks burning jerseys, crying in bars, screaming at the top of their lungs, and threatening LeBron's health. They are not worth talking about, or to.

5. People who live in Miami and are so excited, LeBetard style, that they have the makings of a mega-team.

So within those 5 groups, there are a few things I find really fascinating.

Cleveland has a history of losing. They lose big football games, they lost a football franchise. They lost a few World Series they should have won. They didn't make the NBA Finals despite the best record 2 years in a row. They lose, and the fans know it.

I think the biggest misconception, however, is that LeBron really knows this. Yes, LeBron grew up in Cleveland, but he grew up other-worldly. I am consistently disappointed with pro athletes and their viewpoint on sports. They look at things from a very different place.

Think about LeBron's timeline. He is 25 years old, he was born in 1985. In 1986 & 1987 Cleveland lost heartbreaking football games, Lebron was an infant and a toddler - do those matter to him? No.

When LeBron was all of 8, Mike Jordan and the Bulls swept the Cavs, "The Shot" was something that LeBron probably didn't watch live, and considering he wore #23 up til this upcoming season, I don't think he was pained much by the memory of Jordan dominating his hometown team.
I think back to when I was 8, which included the 1986 World Series and I don't think I stayed up for a single World Series game - and baseball was my life. The pain for LeBron wasn't real there either.

In 1997, the Indians were 2 outs away from a World Series title when Jose Mesa blew it - Lebron was already a Yankee fan by then. Did that pain of a Cleveland loss matter to him? No. You also have to remember he was a Yankee fan when the Indians lost in 1998 to, who else, his beloved Yankees.

By the time "King James" was a Frosh in HS he was the best player in Akron, and his Sophomore year he was Mr. Basketball in Ohio. He was called The Chosen One by Sports Illustrated his Sr. year - he doesn't need other teams, he never did.

He never needed to identify with the masses in Akron, Cleveland or Ohio in general - he is his own mass, his own team.

His choice to rip the hearts out of Cleveland yet again, at first glance, seems to be something seeped in tradition and par for the course for Cleveland, but I think King James has been living in his own world for so long that he has no idea what it means, in context. I do think he actually is blind to the fact that he is part of that Art Modell, Jose Mesa, Michael Jordan and now, LeBron James Mt. Rushmore of Cleveland heartbreak.

Nothing more needs to be said about his egotism, LeBron is a lost cause as a person. Now the question goes purely to the business of sport, and I cannot wait to see how Pat Riley sells this Heat team to Free Agents. Now that's NBA basketball.

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