I Love it when LeBron Loses

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Weird how an adult male devotes so much energy and attention on hating a professional athlete. Indicative of an atypical psychological profile to be honest
 
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Weird how an adult male devotes so much energy and attention on hating a professional athlete. Indicative of an atypical psychological profile to be honest

Weird how you are ghosting in here, and are purposely avoiding any questions about it. Indicative of an atypical psychological profile to be honest.
 

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Dunno wtf a ghost even means dude. You happy? You can go back to watching Lebron missing shots in the Finals now
 

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Listen man you have close to 37,000 posts on an internet forum, the majority of which are probably negative. Go outside instead of wasting your life away. I’ll leave this thread now so you can hate away on a successful athlete without being triggered
 
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Listen man you have close to 37,000 posts on an internet forum, the majority of which are probably negative. Go outside instead of wasting your life away. I’ll leave this thread now so you can hate away on a successful athlete without being triggered

You're just not very bright. I've been here ~15 years, the math shows that I average around 6-7 posts a day. You are on a pace that crushes that.

Take a second and reflect on how stupid that makes you look.

Now, are you going to admit that you blatantly lied about ghosting?
 
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[ Lakers officially eliminated from playoffs ]

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[ Apparently LeBitch's own team-mates calling him out for being a drama-queen bitch ]


Lakers reportedly had a players-only meeting to push back on LeBron James for his ‘inconsistent body language,’ and he agreed to try and be better about it





It sounds like the Lakers were tired of the way LeBron James was acting after their mistakes, and he recognized the issue and said it’s something he’s tried to get better at for his whole career.

By Harrison Faigen@hmfaigen <time class="c-byline__item" data-ui="timestamp" datetime="2019-03-30T17:15:28+00:00" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;">Mar 30, 2019, 10:15am PDT</time>


<figure class="e-image e-image--hero" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px 0px 32px; padding: 0px;">
usa_today_12411961.0.jpg
<cite style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; display: inline; opacity: 0.75;">Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports</cite></figure>The Los Angeles Lakers have had nearly innumerable issues this season, and the body language of LeBron James isn’t anywhere near the top of the list in terms of importance.
Still, it seems it was bothersome enough for his teammates that they felt it needed to be addressed in a players only meeting last month, as Dave McMenamin of ESPN reported in his sprawling recap of what went wrong for the Lakers this season:
On an off day in Memphis following a 128-115 loss to an Anthony Davis-less Pelicans team on Feb. 23, the LeBron James-led Lakers had their own air-it-out session. Rondo organized the players-only meeting to find “a better understanding of one another,” a team source told ESPN.
McMenamin reminds that this meeting came in the aftermath of James seeming to call out the younger Lakers in the media after the previous game in New Orleans, a loss to the Pelicans after which James asked “how many know what’s at stake if you’ve never been there? ... When you’ve never been there or know what it takes to actually shoot for something like (the playoffs), sometimes you’re afraid to get uncomfortable. You’ve got to be comfortable with being uncomfortable.”
That was apparently the final straw for a few of the Lakers, and James seemed to respond well to their counter-critique (via McMenamin):
The meeting in Memphis was a retort of sorts. In what became an open forum, several players spoke up. Players focused on James’ inconsistent body language throughout the year. The four-time MVP copped to the critique, telling his teammates that, in essence, cutting out behavior like slumped shoulders and sideways glances has been something he has tried to work on his entire career.
The next night, James seemed to take the criticism to heart, putting his arms around guys during huddles, looking engaged during timeouts, and being vocal on defense -- but the Lakers still lost, 110-105, to a Grizzlies team that had lost 17 of their previous 20 games.
“Just because [the meeting] was positive doesn’t mean we’re going to win 25 games in a row,” a team source told ESPN.
It also doesn’t mean that James’ body language will be permanently fixed, as evidenced by his reaction after his fourth turnover of the first quarter on Friday night, a turnover that was caused by Kyle Kuzma not completing his cut (which he raised his hand to take responsibility for after).
Watch James:<iframe id="google_ads_iframe_/172968584/sbn/nba/silverscreenandroll.com_4" title="3rd party ad content" name="google_ads_iframe_/172968584/sbn/nba/silverscreenandroll.com_4" width="100%" height="425.2075471698113" scrolling="no" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" frameborder="0" data-google-container-id="b" data-concert-status="1424662917046" data-load-complete="true" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: bottom; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px auto; padding: 0px; border-width: 0px; border-style: initial; display: block; max-width: 100%; width: 728px;"></iframe>
<twitter-widget class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" id="twitter-widget-0" data-tweet-id="1112040734125780992" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 10px auto; padding: 0px; position: static; visibility: visible; display: block; transform: rotate(0deg); max-width: 100%; width: 500px; min-width: 220px;"><article class="MediaCard MediaCard--mediaForward cards-multimedia customisable-border" data-scribe="component:card" dir="ltr">




</article>
Harrison Faigen
@hmfaigen





In the wake of the LeBron/body language/players only meeting report yesterday, this sequence couldn't help but jump out at me last night:https://www.silverscreenandroll.com/2019/3/30/18288298/lakers-rumors-players-only-meeting-lebron-james-body-language-rajon-rondo-espn-report-news-video …




</twitter-widget>

That reaction isn’t unforgivable, but it is also understandable that over the course of the year, a cascade of such gesticulations would make teammates feel as if they’re being shown up and embarrassed. It’s to James’s credit that he’s apparently been trying to work on this, and he’s far from the only player to react this way to miscues at times, but given that we’re in year 16 of his career, it’s probably safe to say that he isn’t going to make a permanent change at this point. Habits that ingrained are hard to break.
Again, this isn’t to call James a bad teammate, or anything of the sort. It’s just to point out that this habit apparently has worn on at least a few of his teammates, to the point that they felt the need to address it. It was far from the Lakers’ biggest issue this year, but in a season when they needed as much cohesion as possible to survive all the trade deadline-related drama and injury adversity this team went through, it sounds like it certainly didn’t help.
Maybe on a team that is less of a powder keg in the years to come, James’ mannerisms won’t matter as much. And hey, if the Lakers are winning, James probably won’t feel the need to react negatively to plays so often. This summer may offer a solution to both issues, but if it doesn’t, this will be something to watch for again next season.


 
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3/28/19

Skip Bayless:

"His impact/PER is frightenly dropping" (1:10)
"His impact on the game is dropping shockingly" (1:12)
"He is a flawed all-time great player, and for you to put him in the same sentence as Michael Jordan is laughable, and blasphemous" (1:25)
"He continues to do (stupid) things that shock me, like air-ball free throws... and LeBron does it on a regular basis" (1:41)
"LeBron is the most interesting player in the history of sports to me, because ... every night drama gets created around him,
I call him the drama King, and he's still doing it in his 16th season" (2:26)
"There were 8 games earlier this year that were sitting on a platter for the king to close.. they didn't close the deal" (2:37)


https://www.foxsports.com/watch/undisputed/video/1466853443805


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In fairness, once Skip Bayless hates you, he hates you forever. Even if you completely beyond obvious prove him wrong, it doesnt matter.

The guy still to this day rips on Andrew Luck every chance he gets because he swore up and down RG3 was the better QB in 2012.
 

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