Friday, July 9, 2010

Lebron - Me, Myself, I

I was going to originally label this post RIP: The Death of the Local Sports Market.  I was going to go into all about how the local sports market can't compete with national sports teams and how places like Cleveland simply can't hold onto players who want to make more money and get the spotlight elsewhere.  But this post is more about the pompous, egotistical, young man who basically thumbed his nose at his hometown.  Check this editorial out which mirrors my opinion http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100709/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_jim_litke070810.

I have no problem with Lebron going to Miami or anywhere else.  That is his right in the stupid world of professional sports.  However, it was the way and the manner that he conducted it that completely turned me sideways.  There was the whole drawn out process - have six teams come and "present" to me at a downtown Cleveland hotel.  There was the whole ridiculous national t.v. prime time event where he announced his "Decision".  It was how it was drawn out and built up.  It was a complete lack of gratitude and humility towards the area that basically adored and idolized him since he was in his mid teens.  But why should we be surprised at a guy who shows up at Indians games wearing a Yankees cap and at Browns games wearing a Cowboys hat.  As Debsue has stated, he has had people kow-tow to him since he was a kid in this area so we tended to look the other ways at such things.  He also didn't extend any courtesy at all to the team and the town that did everything possible to try to win a championship.  You can't fault the Cavalier owner who spent lavishly to put players around him, who build a first rate practice facility, and gave Lebron's buddies jobs.  In the ridiculous world of pro basketball, it seems to pay to get really bad before getting really good by getting way under the salary cap.  But finally, it was the self aggrandizement that got me.  "I am going to take my talents and play in South Beach".  If Lebron's goal is to build his brand and leave a legacy, he greatly tarnished it.  While it may be masked in the form of preferring to play for a team that can win championships, it clearly was rooted in ego.

I am done with professional sports - I can no longer support professional athletes (and owners too) who create a transient environment of overpriced entertainment.  I will take my entertainment dollars and time and invest them elsewhere.

1 comment:

lookleep said...

I agree wholeheartedly. I really didn't expect LeBron to stay, but how he did it spoke volumes.

Here's another good article: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/michael_rosenberg/07/08/lebron.event/index.html

College sports are much more enjoyable. Not so many huge egos. Find a good coach and watch his team evolve through the years.

Go Bucks! :)