Benevolent One
Team Owner
It took a long time but LeBron James finally said the first thing he said in months that I agree with. Recently, NBA commissioner David Stern again threw out the idea of contraction, or doing away with several teams in the league. There are several teams who have very little fan support and several teams (like the LA Clippers) who are just so poorly run that they are never competitive. The funny thing about LeBron supporting this idea is that Miami is one of those places where the fans really haven't supported their team very well at all until this year. At any rate, there are a lot of guys in the league who simply aren't very good. The main reason for that is that there are too many teams so it takes more guys to fill all those extra roster spots.
While it would suck for the few fans who actually do care about those teams, the fan bases simply don't support their teams. In addition, places like Cleveland and Milwaukee, while great basketball towns, are not where free agents want to play. LeBron would have had a lot better chance of winning titles in Chicago than he will in Miami, but these guys want to chill out in Souff Beach (as LeBron pronounces it) than freeze in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Detroit, etc over the winter.
Here is the article:
(By the way, the guy who wrote this article used to write for the Akron Beacon Journal. He first moved to the Plain Dealer in Cleveland because he was somebody who was close to LeBron. Then when LeBron moved to the Miami Heat, Windhorst moved to ESPN because they wanted him to continue to cover LeBron. So we even lost a really good sportswriter when LeBron left.)
LeBron James discusses contraction
PHOENIX -- This won't make LeBron James popular at the next player's union meeting, but Thursday he suggested the NBA would be more entertaining if there was contraction of teams.
In defending his decision to join up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh on the Miami Heat, James said the league was better when numerous teams had multiple stars. He said he hopes the league can return to that someday, because right now there isn't enough talent to support the 30 current teams.
"Hopefully the league can figure out one way where it can go back to the '80s where you had three or four All-Stars, three or four superstars, three or four Hall of Famers on the same team," James said. "The league was great. It wasn't as watered down as it is [now]."
In fact, James seemed to have a couple of ideas of which teams could go and some players that would make other teams better right now.
"[Contraction] is not my job; I'm a player but that is why it the league was so great," James said.
"Imagine if you could take Kevin Love off Minnesota and add him to another team and you shrink the [league]. Looking at some of the teams that aren't that great, you take Brook Lopez or you take Devin Harris off these teams that aren't that good right now and you add him to a team that could be really good. Not saying let's take New Jersey and let's take Minnesota out of the league. But hey, you guys are not stupid, I'm not stupid, it would be great for the league."
Perhaps that's a hint why James didn't seriously consider signing with the Nets last summer.
James spoke on the issue before taking on the Phoenix Suns, but much of the focus this week is on Saturday when the Heat are part of the Christmas Day main event against the Lakers in Los Angeles.
James said Wednesday he doesn't enjoy playing on Christmas even if it is the main attraction on the league's regular season schedule.
James said the Christmas game wouldn't be such a big deal if there were fewer teams like in the '80s.
"You had more [star] players on a team, which made almost every game anticipated, not just a Christmas Day game," James said. "I don't ever think it is bad for the league when guys decide they want to do some greatness for what we call a team sport."
Brian Windhorst covers the Miami Heat for ESPN.com
While it would suck for the few fans who actually do care about those teams, the fan bases simply don't support their teams. In addition, places like Cleveland and Milwaukee, while great basketball towns, are not where free agents want to play. LeBron would have had a lot better chance of winning titles in Chicago than he will in Miami, but these guys want to chill out in Souff Beach (as LeBron pronounces it) than freeze in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Detroit, etc over the winter.
Here is the article:
(By the way, the guy who wrote this article used to write for the Akron Beacon Journal. He first moved to the Plain Dealer in Cleveland because he was somebody who was close to LeBron. Then when LeBron moved to the Miami Heat, Windhorst moved to ESPN because they wanted him to continue to cover LeBron. So we even lost a really good sportswriter when LeBron left.)
LeBron James discusses contraction
PHOENIX -- This won't make LeBron James popular at the next player's union meeting, but Thursday he suggested the NBA would be more entertaining if there was contraction of teams.
In defending his decision to join up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh on the Miami Heat, James said the league was better when numerous teams had multiple stars. He said he hopes the league can return to that someday, because right now there isn't enough talent to support the 30 current teams.
"Hopefully the league can figure out one way where it can go back to the '80s where you had three or four All-Stars, three or four superstars, three or four Hall of Famers on the same team," James said. "The league was great. It wasn't as watered down as it is [now]."
In fact, James seemed to have a couple of ideas of which teams could go and some players that would make other teams better right now.
"[Contraction] is not my job; I'm a player but that is why it the league was so great," James said.
"Imagine if you could take Kevin Love off Minnesota and add him to another team and you shrink the [league]. Looking at some of the teams that aren't that great, you take Brook Lopez or you take Devin Harris off these teams that aren't that good right now and you add him to a team that could be really good. Not saying let's take New Jersey and let's take Minnesota out of the league. But hey, you guys are not stupid, I'm not stupid, it would be great for the league."
Perhaps that's a hint why James didn't seriously consider signing with the Nets last summer.
James spoke on the issue before taking on the Phoenix Suns, but much of the focus this week is on Saturday when the Heat are part of the Christmas Day main event against the Lakers in Los Angeles.
James said Wednesday he doesn't enjoy playing on Christmas even if it is the main attraction on the league's regular season schedule.
James said the Christmas game wouldn't be such a big deal if there were fewer teams like in the '80s.
"You had more [star] players on a team, which made almost every game anticipated, not just a Christmas Day game," James said. "I don't ever think it is bad for the league when guys decide they want to do some greatness for what we call a team sport."
Brian Windhorst covers the Miami Heat for ESPN.com