firehand

Prometheus 6   

Do not make the mistake of thinking that because my conclusion is the same as another person's that my reasoning is the same

January 02, 2004

 

All that and a bag of chips

Yup. I seen him play. Boy rocks.



The Hype for James Was Worth It
By CHRIS BROUSSARD

CLEVELAND, Dec. 31 — For a month and a half, LeBron James had the world of basketball wide-eyed and open-mouthed like no one before him. He was 18 years old, fresh out of high school and averaging 17 points, 6 rebounds and 6 assists a game in the National Basketball Association.

Magic Johnson had put up similar numbers at that age, but that was at Michigan State. Michael Jordan had averaged a mere 13 points and 4 rebounds as an 18-year-old at North Carolina, and Kevin Garnett and Kobe Bryant were N.B.A. reserves for most of their rookie season.

Conventional wisdom said that it would not last, that there was a rookie wall in James's future that would keep him from staying at such a level.

In mid-December, James hit that wall running, scaled it with ease and used it to propel himself into another dimension.

As if it were not enough to enter the N.B.A. playing like an All-Star, James has spent the past two weeks playing like a superstar.

Over the Cleveland Cavaliers' last 10 games, James, a 6-foot-8, 240-pound guard, has averaged 27.7 points a game, scoring more than 30 points five times.

"You'd think he's 25 or 26 years old," said Rod Thorn, the president of the Nets, who will play James Friday night at Continental Arena in East Rutherford, N.J., in what will be James's first visit as a professional to the New York metropolitan area. "It's incredible. You look at Kobe and Garnett and those guys — when they were his age, they weren't as good as he is. Will he get up to their level? I'm not saying he will or won't, but there's never been an 18-year-old guy as good as he is."

Posted by P6 at January 2, 2004 08:47 AM | Trackback URL: http://www.prometheus6.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2709
Comments

Yeah, but how's his team doing? NBA Rookie of the Year: Carmelo Anthony.


Posted by at January 2, 2004 08:54 AM 

His team's doing about as well as the Bulls did their first year with Jordan.

You know dat boy's a walking franchise and endorsement factory. And with him out there scaring the hell out of the defense, a team of solid players built around him will look like a team of stars in three years.


Posted by at January 2, 2004 09:54 AM 

Well, that's true. But you can't ignore how Carmelo is playing on a team that last year was just as bad as Cleveland.

My real bet is for pure marketing reasons, the NBA names James and Anthony co-rookies of the year.


Posted by at January 2, 2004 10:33 AM 

At least that would make more sense than Yao starting over Shaq in the All-Star game.


Posted by at January 2, 2004 10:50 AM 
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