Perkins: LeBron James has completed turnaround from villain to hero

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MIAMI – LeBron James has completed the rarely seen transition from national villain to national darling. For the first time in two years, there’s no over-the-top hatred for James to start the season. There’s no venom or vitriol. It’s been an amazing transition to watch.

Kobe Bryant made a similar change/comeback a few years ago. LeBron’s might have been bigger.

“Quicker,” Dwyane Wade said with a smile. “But I don’t know about bigger. You can go with quicker comeback.”

OK, he’s got a point. Bryant, the Los Angeles Lakers superstar who was once among the nation’s favorite athletes, was Public Enemy No. 1 after his incident in Colorado and his very public feud with teammate Shaquille O’Neal.

Then he won a title. And another one. He kept his marriage intact and carried himself as a gentleman. All of a sudden he had made the greatest American comeback since Bill Clinton.

And so it is with LeBron. He won, and now he’s loved again. Not that he’s keeping track of applause and compliments.

About an hour after he scored 26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead the Heat to a 120-107 season-opening victory over Boston on Tuesday at AmericanAirlines Arena, James opined on his Great American Comeback. Perhaps a bit surprisingly, he said he’s not sure whether he’s loved again.

“I have no idea,” he said. “And I don’t even really worry about that or even listen to what’s going on. Honestly, I just be me, do me, and let everything else take care of itself.”

James is a hero of sorts once again, largely because he won the MVP, Finals MVP and Olympic gold medal, and the Heat – as the defending NBA champions – are likeable. No one is complaining about LeBron being a choker, not having a low-post game or passing on the final shot. He’s no longer the butt of jokes.

Love is in the air. It’s another example of how James is a truly unique player, talent and person. It’s also another example of how winning cures all.

James phrases the reason for the turnaround differently.

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Bernucca: Forget the championship, Thunder want a “sustainable team”

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When the Oklahoma City Thunder traded James Harden on Saturday night, they revealed to everyone that they are a team far more concerned with the bottom line than the top of the heap.

Probably a bit ahead of schedule, the Thunder reached the NBA Finals last season. As we have said before, they were a questionable foul call away from opening a 2-0 lead on the mighty Miami Heat that would have cultivated the doubt and derision that has swirled around LeBron James for the last five years.

And even as the Heat were wiping the AmericanAirlines Arena floor with the Thunder in the clinching Game 5, the conventional wisdom was that Oklahoma City would be back very soon. Its window of championship opportunity was still wide open and would remain that way for several years.

Why wouldn’t it?

The Thunder had a true superstar in three-time scoring champion Kevin Durant. They had another All-Star in Russell Westbrook, whose ceiling still seems limitless. They had the hypotenuse of the “Big Three” triangle – a mandatory component to compete for championships in today’s NBA – in Harden, who won the Sixth Man Award only because he was used as a reserve.

Assembling a three-headed monster to compete for a championship is not just a theory. It’s an axiom. Ask the Heat, who did it so ostentatiously they obscured the fact that other teams have been doing it for years.

Ask the Spurs, who have contended and won for a decade with Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. Ask the  Celtics, who have done the same with Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen (and now Rajon Rondo). Or ask the Lakers, who have upped the ante to an “Fearsome Foursome” of Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, Steve Nash and Dwight Howard.

All of them looked with some level of envy at the Thunder, whose “Big Three” were all under 25 years old entering this season. Oklahoma City didn’t have a championship window; it had a double patio door.

And owner Clay Bennett, GM Sam Presti and the rest of the braintrust decided to shutter it over a lousy $6 million over the next four years. What a bunch of cheapskates.

In their news release, Presti said the trade “will be important to our organizational goal of a sustainable team.” Huh? Our “organizational goal”? Does that mean the vision is to settle for good because the chance to be great is a little pricey?

And what the hell is a “sustainable team”? Were the Thunder on the verge of Chapter 11 bankruptcy? Do Bennett and his ownership partners have to eat pasta and tunafish if the team doesn’t turn a profit?

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Five reasons to feel positive about the Miami Heat

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(This is another in a series of 30 guest columns that will run in October, when optimism reigns supreme across the NBA. The theme will be “Five Reasons to Feel Positive About … ” We encourage you to follow the authors on Twitter and visit their sites. – CS)

heat small logoHonestly, it’s nearly impossible to list just five reasons to feel positive about the NBA champion Miami Heat. The “Big Three” could take up three spots by themselves, and the fact that they are in possession of the Larry O’Brien Trophy is another great reason to keep partying on Biscayne Boulevard right in front of AmericanAirlines Arena.

But the 2012-13 season is finally ready to start, and this will be a different challenge for the Heat. While the Eastern Conference doesn’t appear to present much of a challenge, gritty teams like the Boston Celtics won’t go down without a fight. In the Western Conference, the Oklahoma City Thunder would love the opportunity to seek revenge, while the Los Angeles Lakers have plenty to prove themselves.

From the outset of training camp, coach Erik Spoelstra has stressed that the team has a fantastic opportunity to win a title this season but purposely refused to use the word “repeat.” That’s because the Heat start 0-0 like any other team, and the mindset is to avoid complacency.

Then again, when you can count on the reigning MVP and Finals MVP to help out the cause, I’d say that’s a pretty good start. Which leads to the first of five reasons to feel excited about the Heat.

1. LeBron James plays for the Heat

A no-brainer. James isn’t just the best basketball player in the world, he’s at the peak of his considerable powers and it almost feels like he is just getting started in absolutely dominating the game at both ends of the floor.

As the centerpiece of the new “positionless” style that will be emphasized more this season, James can truly control the game with his court vision, ballhandling, devastating drives to the rim and dogged defense that is a hallmark of the Pat Riley vision of Heat basketball.

We’ve witnessed, ahem, a willingness to add to his game and incorporate more post-up moves to his arsenal. But his growth off the court is evident as well. Perhaps it helped playing for a stable franchise led by longtime owner Micky Arison and a legend in Riley that knows how to win rings.

Maybe that had a lot to do with it, or maybe it’s overstated. But James the player has never been more comfortable playing alongside Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and a talented supporting cast. That’s a good enough reason to be quite excited if you’re a Heat fan – and depressed if you’re a fan of any other team.

2. Dwyane Wade is rested and healthy again

It’s amazing to realize that the player formerly known as “Flash” is now one of the Heats’s elder statesman. While it may be fair to question his durability the past few years, Wade took this summer off and got proper treatment for his troublesome knee.

Spoelstra insisted at Heat training camp that we would see that quickness and lateral movement that Wade enjoyed earlier in his career. It remains to be seen whether that will hold up over the course of an 82-game season, but he looked better and better once he began to play in the preseason.

The Heat have a chance to be utterly dominant if Wade can truly be healthy and at the top of his game.

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Tweet of the Day: Manu Ginobili

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Perhaps, after his playing career is over, San Antonio Spurs guard Manu Ginobili might have a future in filmmaking.

Ginobili tweeted out a link to a simple, yet very cool time lapse video that he made after leaving American Airlines Arena in Miami following the Spurs preseason game against the Heat.

I made a TimeLapse vid in Miami from the arena to the airplane. Hope u guys enjoy it. http://t.co/Mx0TFRTM
@manuginobili
Manu Ginobili

Should he decide to pursue a career in filmmaking, he would join the ranks of many other NBA athletes and who also have worked in Hollywood, or ar currently pursuing film opportunities there.

Stars such as Shaquille O’Neal—whose last production was reality sports show Shaq Vs, and Steve Nash—who made ESPN’s 30 for 30 documentary Into The Wind, have already made a name for themselves in Hollywood.

Other NBA players, such as Elton Brand—who is presently producing a biopic about the life of Tupac Shakur with the aid of Afeni Shakur (Tupac’s mother), are already branching out into the world of film and television.

Should Ginobili be able to make something in greater detail and length while maintaining the same coolness factor as his time lapse video, he may have a successful future in film.

Morning News Roundup

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Here are this morning’s top NBA news stories:

  • “Lawson, Nuggets nearing an extension?” by Yannis Koutroupis from HoopsWorld
  • “For the Nets’ Joe Johnson, No more Iso-Joe,” by Howard Beck from the New York Times
  • “Marcin Gortat aims to prove more than a Steve Nash creation,” by Michael Schwartz from  Valley of the Suns
  • “Andray Blatche of Brooklyn Nets wears No. 0 as a reminder of troubled stint with Washington Wizards,” by Zach Braziller from the New York Post
  • “Presence of coach Mike Brown helped allure Antawn Jamison to L.A.,” by Elliot Teaford from the Los Angeles Daily News
  • “Accident slows down O.J. Mayo’s acclimation to new teammates,” by Eddie Sefko from the Dallas Morning News
  • “Injured in his sleep, Love sits out Wolves win,” by Jerry Zgoda from the Minneapolis Star-Tribune
  • “A night on the town in Shanghai leaves Miami Heat stars tired,” by Joseph Goodman from the Miami Herald