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3 In The Key: The Inherent Fear of Miami, The Big Asterisk, Where is Shawn Kemp now

1. Identity crisis in Miami

Last week, Lebron James likened himself to Tim Tebow: “I love to see what a guy can do when his back is up against the wall and everybody counts him out. I’m in that same boat sometimes.”

Funny because Lebron’s perception of how the public views him couldn’t be further from the truth. No one has ever counted him out, despite his repeated disappearances in crunch-time and failure to win that first championship.

Lebron and Tebow are actually complete opposites. We focus on everything Tebow can’t do, and are completely surprised when he does anything outside the realm of our limited expectations for him. On the opposite side of the coin, we know that Lebron can do anything he wants, and that’s why we react everytime he comes up short at anything.

And what this level of expectation creates is an inherent fear that Lebron and the Miami Heat are always on the verge of putting it all together. Forgotten amidst all our criticism is that this team was two wins from the championship in their first playoff run.

The individual talents on this team overshadows what is essentially a team that’s poorly constructed and reliant on their top players. But when their top player is the greatest talent in the game, perhaps everything else doesn’t matter.

When Miami is dominant like they were on opening day against Dallas, we wonder how anyone can possibly compete with this team. And even when they slump with three straight road losses like in the past week, the inherent fear remains that they’re so close to putting it all together.

The Heat will always disappoint us until their ultimate goal is reached. But along the way, the fear that the dominant team we expect to see will become reality makes them a fascinating study of how perception is so easily altered by our expectations.

2. The Big Asterisk

It appears as though Kevin Garnett’s career will end with an asterisk next to his resume.

Since joining the Celtics and winning a championship with the team in his first year, he’s earned the reputation as a fugazy: a phony tough guy who will pick on anyone, talk trash even when he’s not playing, and even accused of calling another player a cancer patient.

This storyline runs contrary to who he was in Minnesota, where he became one of the few to make the successful transition from high school to the pros. He made the Wolves a relevant franchise, and was the superstar we all sympathized with: doing all that he could in a losing situation for over a decade. As basketball fans, most of us were thrilled to see him finally get out of the first round with the help of Sam Cassell and Latrell Sprewell.

This is also the same guy, who in his prime, along with Chris Webber and Tim Duncan, put up stats on a nightly basis that redefined the power forward position. And though he was often faulted for shrinking in the big moments, he delivered a huge Game 7 performance against the Sacramento Kings in his only prolonged playoff run with the Wolves, and was the best player on the court in the series-clinching win over the Lakers in 2008.

So why has Garnett’s on court behavior deteriorated so much in recent years? The explanation is simple if you’ve followed his entire career.

If there’s a signature trait that we can associate with Garnett, it is his mental approach to the game: his intensity and focus on the court is matched by few.

Being on the court is almost an out of body experience for Garnett. He becomes a different person, he’s so embedded in the action that it’s bound to result in confrontations. And with his diminishing skills on the court, he can only impose so much of his presence with just his game. To a factor on the court, the intimidation tactics allows him to compensate what he’s lost as a basketball player.

For over a decade, this approach helped him become one of the best players in the game. Now that he’s on the decline, it’s become a flaw that threatens to change the way we’ll remember him.

But I hope we can all at least reach an understanding of what basketball means to Garnett, and how he’s always been consistent with his approach towards the game. It doesn’t absolve him of his behaviour, but it at least allows us to form a full view of his career and appreciate the body of work of one of the best power forwards of this generation.

3. Shawn Kemp, Mentor

We’ve all heard the jokes about Shawn Kemp. The once dominant power forward who soared above the rim on a regular basis, became over-weight, fathered too many children, and left the game with a stained reputation.

But at age 42, Shawn Kemp appears to have turned things around. In this Pro Basketball Talk article, Kemp is profiled as a mentor for Philadelphia 76ers center Spencer Hawes.

The Reign Man now lives in Seattle, is married, owns a restaurant called Oskar’s Kitchen and has dropped 55 pounds since retiring. He’s now the same weight as he was during the peak of his career.

Sports Illustrated will be doing a feature on Kemp in the near future, be on the lookout as it’s always nice to see my favorite players from the 90s doing well with life after basketball.

Learning To Accept Lebron
Technically, there’s still a sequence of events that need to happen before the lockout is officially over, but don’t let that stop you from immersing yourself in the latest Chris Paul or Dwight Howard rumor, it’s been too long since we talked actual hoops.
Practice facilities will open later this week, free agency expected to start on December 9th and the season will open on Christmas; which means I have little less than a month to gather my thoughts on the Miami Heat and decide whether I want them to succeed this year.
The first season of Lebron and Wade – I have too much respect for the knowledge of people reading this to include Bosh with these two – exceeded all expectations. We’ve all long forgotten about their slow start to the regular season,  how they came together in the playoffs against Boston and Chicago and all the game to game drama in between that.
In fact, after reading and watching so much of this team of villains last season, there is only one takeaway: they collapsed in the Finals.
I took satisfaction in seeing Miami fall apart and come up short, as I’m sure many did. I don’t think there’s a sense of personal hatred when it comes to Bron, Wade and Bosh. It just wouldn’t have felt right for their season to be so preordained. To have a victory parade before and after the season seemed a bit too much. It would have validated everything that they did.
Given this thought process, you couldn’t have scripted a better ending for the Heat.
But is there any value to root against them over and over again, season after season, in the hopes that it never works out for them? It inevitably becomes a question about how you feel about Lebron James.
It seems difficult to pinpoint what exactly we want from him, or why exactly we want to see his demise. He will be the defining player of this generation, like Kobe before him, Jordan before that.
On the court, he is as unselfish a superstar we’ve seen – almost to a fault, especially since he’s had consecutive years of coming up short in the biggest moments. Off the court, he is the exact opposite. He is only about himself and is either unaware of this perception or aware but unable to do anything about his because he’s spent his whole life being told he’s the greatest.
This is how I see Lebron, but even with all that, I can’t think of a reason why I wouldn’t want to see him win a championship. If a lesson needed to be learned, if egos needed to be humbled, than their loss to the Mavericks in the Finals served those purposes. But why would I want to see him fail anymore?
Like it or not, we are basketball fans in the Lebron James era. With all great players, there comes a point when no matter how much you despise them for your own reasons, you can’t help but respect what they’re doing on the court, even appreciate and root for them after a period of time.
That time will come for Lebron James. It always does. I just have to figure out whether I want to see him fail just a little bit longer.
- steven lebron
Follow @steven_lebron on twitter.

Learning To Accept Lebron

Technically, there’s still a sequence of events that need to happen before the lockout is officially over, but don’t let that stop you from immersing yourself in the latest Chris Paul or Dwight Howard rumor, it’s been too long since we talked actual hoops.

Practice facilities will open later this week, free agency expected to start on December 9th and the season will open on Christmas; which means I have little less than a month to gather my thoughts on the Miami Heat and decide whether I want them to succeed this year.

The first season of Lebron and Wade – I have too much respect for the knowledge of people reading this to include Bosh with these two – exceeded all expectations. We’ve all long forgotten about their slow start to the regular season,  how they came together in the playoffs against Boston and Chicago and all the game to game drama in between that.

In fact, after reading and watching so much of this team of villains last season, there is only one takeaway: they collapsed in the Finals.

I took satisfaction in seeing Miami fall apart and come up short, as I’m sure many did. I don’t think there’s a sense of personal hatred when it comes to Bron, Wade and Bosh. It just wouldn’t have felt right for their season to be so preordained. To have a victory parade before and after the season seemed a bit too much. It would have validated everything that they did.

Given this thought process, you couldn’t have scripted a better ending for the Heat.

But is there any value to root against them over and over again, season after season, in the hopes that it never works out for them? It inevitably becomes a question about how you feel about Lebron James.

It seems difficult to pinpoint what exactly we want from him, or why exactly we want to see his demise. He will be the defining player of this generation, like Kobe before him, Jordan before that.

On the court, he is as unselfish a superstar we’ve seen – almost to a fault, especially since he’s had consecutive years of coming up short in the biggest moments. Off the court, he is the exact opposite. He is only about himself and is either unaware of this perception or aware but unable to do anything about his because he’s spent his whole life being told he’s the greatest.

This is how I see Lebron, but even with all that, I can’t think of a reason why I wouldn’t want to see him win a championship. If a lesson needed to be learned, if egos needed to be humbled, than their loss to the Mavericks in the Finals served those purposes. But why would I want to see him fail anymore?

Like it or not, we are basketball fans in the Lebron James era. With all great players, there comes a point when no matter how much you despise them for your own reasons, you can’t help but respect what they’re doing on the court, even appreciate and root for them after a period of time.

That time will come for Lebron James. It always does. I just have to figure out whether I want to see him fail just a little bit longer.

- steven lebron

Follow @steven_lebron on twitter.

Nike in collaboration with LeBron James has developed an off-court clothing line featuring a very royal looking lion logo designed to pay homage to LeBron’s “heart of a lion.”


“Game after game. LeBron James’ heart stays strong. The two-time NBA MVP has seen his fair share of battles. He’s done his time on the hardwood. In the gym. And around the neighborhood. With every victory the beast within grows stronger. More determined. Fearless. Always on.”

Nike in collaboration with LeBron James has developed an off-court clothing line featuring a very royal looking lion logo designed to pay homage to LeBron’s “heart of a lion.”

“Game after game. LeBron James’ heart stays strong. The two-time NBA MVP has seen his fair share of battles. He’s done his time on the hardwood. In the gym. And around the neighborhood. With every victory the beast within grows stronger. More determined. Fearless. Always on.”