Sunday, February 17, 2013

King's League

LeBron James is good. I know I am not breaking any news with that. But what has always been interesting to me is, how well his career has stuck to the script and followed the plan when it comes to greatness. That's not easy considering how improbable the plan looked and how complicated the script read given the unprecedented hype and expectations he carried into the NBA. There has never been an athlete who has met such levels of hype. And that's despite the fact that no athlete has ever had to deal with as much hype as LeBron and they still always fall way short of expectation. You could make an argument that LeBron has even surpassed the ridiculous hype since being called "the chosen one" when he was just 17-years old. He made it harder on himself with the whole drama off the court around his free agency and made some enemies across the nation, but his game on the court never deviated from the golden script a whole lot. Most people's anger and hatred seemed to have dissipated with the championship last year as Americans love a winner more than anything.  There is still some lll-will around him for having "taken his talents to South Beach" - including your truly not totally pardoning him yet, but at this all-star break, LeBron's star is at the highest it has ever been.

LeBron's game has constantly and consistently improved over the years, though not at the pace some people expected at times. But some of that might be media and other's fault and not LeBron's. There were some legitimate concerns about his killer instincts and toughness that he finally answered during last year's playoffs. There were a couple of games against the Pacers and the Celtics where he dominated the game and just wouldn't let his team lose. The Heat were slowly and surely becoming his team throughout last season, but that playoff run put the finishing touches on the change of ownership from Wade to LeBron. It was not Wade's house anymore and he was merely renting a room from LeBron, a room that might have even been smaller than Bosh's sub-let. LeBron didn't look like he needed Wade a whole lot as he showed he could do everything Wade did including hitting clutch game winners, only better. The championship victory erased many concerns. The toughness gene might still be missing, but the perception has changed forever. Perception is often reality in life, especially when it comes to abstract intangibles in sports like "being clutch" or "having heart." With the MVP trophy and the ring last year, LeBron was the "king' for real finally.

This season, LeBron is taking the next step, the very existence of which was not a guarantee considering how great he was already. Where do you go from that impressive 2012? LeBron is going right to the GOAT discussion - Greatest Of All Time. He is bringing everything in his arsenal together and with the addition of more low-post polish and championship experience, he is putting up numbers that challenges all conventional wisdom around basketball efficiency. I don't know if 40's are the new 30's, but shooting 60% may become the new 50% as LeBron is making 60% look normal and simple. He is currently averaging above 56% shooting for the season, which is unheard of for a wing player. Even MJ has not shot that high for a season, though we are not sure if LeBron can hold on to that through the end of this season. But he just came off a ridiculous stretch where he averaged over 30 points and 60% shooting for 6 straight games.  Thats efficiency and domination at historic levels not even taking in to account all the other things he does on the court - namely the rebounds, assists, and the defense. This obviously has kicked off a "is LeBron is the greatest ever?" debate. And the question reached the GOAT himself.  Michael Jordan is celebrating his 50-Th birthday today to coincide with NBA's all-star game. So he has been on TV quite a bit and had to deal with a variant of this question.

While it's still not polite or smart to compare LeBron to Jordan himself, we are not too far away from that discussion. I don't think LeBron will be able to accumulate 6 championships like MJ, but if he gets to 3, we have to entertain the comparison because of every other number LeBron is going to put up. This guy is going to accumulate some numbers that will be hard to argue against. But the comparison between LeBron and Kobe was a topic Jordan had to weigh in on this week. He said it was a tough one, but he will go with 5 over 1, meaning Kobe's 5 rings makes him better than LeBron's one. I think thats people taking the easy way out though I do see the logic of using championships as a tie-breaker if the comparison is tight. We may do that for LeBron V Jordan 4 years from now. But that argument is a cop-out here with Kobe for a couple of reasons. LeBron to me is way better than Kobe and thats not to take anything away from Kobe, who is great in his own right and is probably a top-10 player in the history of the game. But Kobe has never even sniffed the levels of efficiency that LeBron is playing at right now. And, Kobe's 5 rings are way different from Jordan's 6 in that it includes Shaq's 3. So, LeBron in my mind is a ring away from putting Kobe firmly in his rear-view mirror and probably 2 rings away from challenging his airness himself for the best ever because he is going to have all the other numbers on his side. He is true basketball royalty and 2013 will be remembered as the year when he entered the GOAT discussion. That in and of itself is an impressive achievement and a good reason to watch the rest of this NBA season.

Friday, February 08, 2013

A dark, ravenous Super Bowl

ESPN is featuring Michael Jordan highlights in it's sportscenters to commemorate his 50-Th birthday.  That's when you know the Super Bowl is over and we are in one of those sports dead-zones on the calendar. ESPN always goes to MJ for help during these challenging times. It was a great Super Bowl to wrap up the football season. Some things in the Super Bowl worked out as expected - the game was close and Beyonce was hot. There were a few surprises - a long power outage and the niners lost. I wanted and expected the niners to win. The interesting thing was, the niners were down but never out. Joe Flacco was on point in the first half and threw for 3 TDs. The vaunted niners defense looked toothless and fell behind 21-6 when Beyonce started dancing at halftime. The niners had made a habit of coming back from large deficits with Kaepernick at the helm and with the Ravens defense being good but not great, everybody assumed it was only a matter of time before the niners made a comeback in the second half. But Jacoby Jones retuned the second half kickoff back for a TD to put the Ravens up 28-6. The niner faithful was worried, but still hopeful. That's when the power went out.

It was ironic that the niners, who suffered through an embarrassing blackout one Monday night last season on national TV against the Steelers at their home at candlestick, were now experiencing a blackout in the middle of the Super Bowl. NFL was caught unawares at the biggest event in all of sports. The delay was more than 30 minutes and something happened to both the teams during that break. The niners started coming back furiously when the game resumed and by the time the 4-Th quarter rolled around, we all had a tight game on our hands. Kap was playing a perfect second half and the Ravens looked lost and confused. If the niners had won the game, the NFL would have been in trouble because the power outage would have been the focus as far as why the ravens lost. Luckily for the NFL, the niners came back but not all the way back. They had a shot at the end to win and it would have been an all-time classic if they had sealed the deal. It was still a great super bowl, but the comeback story fell short. The niners had multiple shots at the goal line at the end, but a ravens blitz on 4-Th down stopped Kap from throwing the go ahead TD. Harbaugh wanted a holding call, but Michael Crabtree didn't get it.

Lot of the niner fans are still upset at that non-call and some others are more bothered by the missed penalty on the kickoff return by Jacoby Jones. Whatever it was, it's nothing more than water under the bridge now and only Flacco and the Ravens are still smiling. There is some talk about Jim Harbaugh's lack of composure during the game. I wonder what the media would have said if he had won. Even the niner fans are now questioning his demeanor. In reality, that was and will continue to be a non-issue. Both Jim and the niners should be good for a few years. It's a young team with a younger QB who looks like a superstar in the making. The real concern is, their defense has been giving up tonnes of points every game since the last couple of games of the regular season. Their secondary is week and the league seems to have figured them out. This league is a copycat league and every team is now ripping them apart. It is now on Trent Baalke and Jim Harbaugh to make some adjustments with free agency and all their draft picks. Flacco had no issues against this defense and earned himself a well-deserved MVP trophy. I have always been a Flacco fan. He is sometimes elite, often unreliable, mostly understated, sporadically arrogant, and definitely clutch. The ravens have to pay him through the nose now that he is a super bowl champion and a free agent. At least they don't have to pay Ray Lewis anymore. The Ray Lewis era is officially over with him going out on top. We can only hope Ray stays retired and doesn't pull a MJ on us.

Saturday, February 02, 2013

Who's got it better than the fans of the HarBowl? Nobody!

HarBowl is for real and almost here. I love everything about this Super Bowl, which is now less than 2 days away. Some people in the media were put off by the very thought of the harbowl from day 1, even before any of the expected overexposure started. Super Bowl stories tend to run it's course in a couple of days and bore us for 10 more days as the non-stop hype machine bombards us for 2 straight weeks. But I was happy to hear the harbowl stories of brotherly love on ESPN instead of it being Ray Lewis's retirement channel, 24 X 7. Both are strong story-lines, but brothers coaching against each other in a Super Bowl is beyond fascinating and may never happen again. Only thing better could be the Manning boys playing each other in the big game and time is running out on that ever happening, though we have 2 years of clock left on it. I also like it because these 2 guys are great coaches, and I don't usually throw around the word "great" without meaning it. Jim Harbaugh is flat out a witch and his head coaching record in both the college and the pros speak for themselves. 

John Harbaugh is even more fascinating. I have always been intrigued by his success given that he started of as a lowly special teams coach in the NFL. For him to go into that Ravens locker room with strong personalities like Ray Lewis and Ed Reed and earn their respect and build an identity for himself takes some serious leadership and people skills. It's not surprising anymore given that he has been successful and nothing builds credibility in sports quite like winning, but coaches like him rarely survive the first 2 or 3 years. I knew he was a stud when he established himself in that town beyond those first couple of years and of course, he will become a legend if he wins the Super Bowl on Sunday. I can't even imagine the mindset of his parents during this Super Bowl. I am glad they got a news conference too during the hype week. They deserve it and their mindset as they watch their 2 sons compete is as good a side-story to follow as anything else. As for the sons, John is a lot more level-headed and normal while Jim is a football psycho. That almost makes me want to pick the older and saner John to win, but Jim is a better coach. Plus he has the better roster. So advantage Jimmy boy.

Speaking of the rosters, the game itself is going to be very interesting and tight. I am expecting a high-scoring game and mistakes will decide it. Turnovers are a story in any football game, but it's going to be even more of a factor in this one as I expect it to be close and swing back and forth. Kaepernick seems to be everybody's favorite QB all of a sudden and Joe Flacco has been playing great in these playoffs too. The Ravens defense has improved over the course of this season, but I don't think they are still good enough to stop what Kaep and Harbaugh will throw at them. The niners do have a far superior defense, but at a neutral venue, against a good offense, I expect them to be good, but not great. Plus Flacco plays well ONLY in big games and all he needs to do is connect on a couple of long bombs to put the Ravens in a good spot. I expect him to do that and I expect Kap to keep up with him and the guy throwing a bad pick or 2 wil decide this game. Or may be a fumble. The running backs in the game are worthy of a lot of attention too, but Frank Gore and Ray Rice have not gotten much airtime due to the other stories in play. Late in the season, their backups LeMichael James and Brandon Pierce have become effective X-factors too. There is enough talent on the field on both sides of the ball to make this Super Bowl a classic. I expect a TD win for the niners. 31-24, San Francisco 49'ers.

In Harbaugh I trust. I meant Jim Harbaugh, but I would neither be surprised nor too disappointed if it ends up being John Harbaugh.