Monday, September 13th, 2010 at 11:44 am  |  88 responses

Talking With LeBron James

“We came here to win and win now.”

by Lang Whitaker | @langwhitaker

You had to know this was coming, right? The biggest story in the NBA this summer was the free agency of LeBron James. Which means he gets the cover of the next issue of SLAM. (Well, one of the covers. There’s two. We’ll have both covers on the site later this week.)

To me, the most amazing thing about LeBron’s summer was after The Decision, when it seemed like open season on LeBron. The criticism came from people like Barkley, Jordan and Magic, not to mention pretty much every person using any form of social networking, criticizing Bron for his work ethic, for his decision-making process, for a perceived unwillingness to be the centerpiece of an NBA team.

Perhaps this is oversimplifying, but here’s my thought on it: LeBron has a better chance of winning a title with Miami next season than he would have with Cleveland.

If you accept that, then the criticism comes down to people being upset about the way LeBron is choosing to try and win. Forget the why’s: What if LeBron doesn’t care about that stuff? He’s now 25 years old, the two-time reigning MVP, and he’s not only playing on one of the best teams in the NBA, he’s playing for a franchise that’s shown it’s willing to spend smart money and will win titles. Perhaps he will never win a title as a sole franchise player. Maybe he will never be Michael Jordan. But being LeBron James is a pretty good place to be.

I spoke with LeBron over the phone two weeks ago. He was in Miami, working out and getting ready for this season. We talked about plenty, from last season’s Playoffs to his elbow injury, about how he knew Miami was the move for him, and — you might not believe this — we even talked about basketball, how the Heat will play this season and what their expectations are.

Here’s a few snippets of the conversation. To read the full interview, go buy SLAM 142, on newsstands everywhere in the next week or so…

SLAM: You guys haven’t even played a game and already people don’t like you.

LBJ: Well, that’s our thing now. For us, we haven’t proven anything. It doesn’t matter how many players you have, or the collective group you have until you actually go out there and play the game as a team, because this is the ultimate team sport. It doesn’t matter what you have as individuals.

SLAM: You mentioned “team sport.” A lot of former players have come out and said, I can’t believe LeBron’s teaming up with these guys, he should want to play against these guys. What’s your take on that?

Lebron James, Miami Heat. LBJ: For me, I feel like my competitive nature is still the same. No matter if I’m teaming up with D-Wade or I’m teaming up with Bosh. My competitive nature is to want to beat the opposing team or the opposing player, whoever is put in front of me. That has not changed. For me to harp on other people, how they feel about my own career, that’s not for me to worry about. I think people should just focus on what they have and go worry about that. For me, I have my goals and I’m going to continue to get better.

SLAM: I get what they’re saying, but aren’t you allowed to want to play with the most talented people you can play with?

LBJ: That was a huge reason. I had an opportunity to go against these guys for seven straight years. I’ve had great battles with D-Wade, great battles with Bosh, and great battles against the Miami Heat and the Toronto Raptors. The opportunity came up where I could play alongside two of the best players we have in the game today, and I took full advantage of it.

SLAM: Before we get too far into the upcoming season, what happened in the Playoffs last year? The Cavs were up 2-1 on Boston and beat them pretty good in Boston, and then they came roaring back.

LBJ: We had a good chance to win that series, and we played well in spurts, but we didn’t play as consistently as Boston did. And I think every Eastern Conference team saw that when they went against Boston, how consistent they were from game to game. Now, they may have lost one game or two games, but I think they were the most consistent team in the Playoffs in the Eastern Conference. That’s why they were able to get back to the Eastern Finals.

SLAM: And you got knocked for not playing well. Not just in that game but really in life, does it ever feel like you really just can’t make everyone happy?

LBJ: I think that’s one thing learned over the summer. I learned throughout my life, that’s one thing you can’t base your life or base your career on, trying to make everyone happy. You have to go out and do what’s best for you and your family, and at the end of the day you know that you played as hard as you can, you know that you gave blood, sweat and tears, then you can be satisfied with that.

* * * * *

SLAM: How do you think it’s going to work with you, Dwyane and Bosh on the floor together? Especially because you and Dwyane are both such perimeter players.

LBJ: I think that’s Coach Spo. Coach Spo is going to put us in position to win ballgames. We’re all ballplayers, we’re all playmakers. We know our ultimate goal is to win championships. I think from the first guy all the way to the 15th guy, if we all have the same goal, it shouldn’t be hard to go out and play the game the right way.

SLAM: How do you know it will work with you and Wade and Bosh playing together?

LBJ: For me, you don’t even think about knowing it will work. You know it’s going to work. You don’t say, I’m going to make my decision and hopefully this works out. D-Wade is a playmaker. I’ve played with D-Wade and I’ve played with Bosh for four years in the summertime. It’s not as long as an NBA season, but you see the sacrifices we was able to make in the summertime, so it wasn’t a hard choice for myself because I know how hard they play the game and I know how much they want to win.

SLAM: Is that going to be the most important part of it, sacrifice?

LBJ: Sacrifice is a part of the game. Now, if you’re talking about sacrificing a few more shots or a few plays here, that’s not a problem. The goal is to an NBA championship, and however we do that, it has to get done. That’s ultimately what we want to do. That’s also why we all came here, to win an NBA championship. It wasn’t so all of us could try to get an MVP award the same year. That’s not what it’s about.

SLAM: The season’s about to start and we’re talking about the way the team’s going to play, but do you think it’s kind of crazy that everyone else is talking about everything but the basketball part of this?

LBJ: I think at this point it’s a little bit easier to sell papers by not talking about the basketball part of it. In the summertime there’s no basketball going on, so the easiest way to get people to read what you’re writing is to write negative things.

SLAM: What will you consider a success next year?

LBJ: We’ll consider a success winning an NBA Championship next year.

SLAM: Nothing less?

LBJ: Nothing less. We came here to win and win now. This isn’t a “jell” year for us because we know we have a five-year, or six-year deal. This isn’t a “jell” year. We want to get it done now, and try to get it done every year.

* * * * *

SLAM: What’s been the best part of the summer for you?

LBJ: They best part of the summer for me has been change. It’s a new beginning, a new start. I’m excited about that. The seven years I had in Cleveland, I loved, and I love those fans and will always love those fans for giving me seven great years. I tried to repay those fans the right way by doing what I did on the court. But it’s been exciting. The change, to know I’m going into a situation I haven’t had since my rookie year, and that’s a new beginning, a fresh start. That’s exciting for me. It’s been a great summer. You’re going to have forks in the road, bumps in the road, throughout life. But if you have your goal and you know which way you’re headed, you just go for it and you don’t stop until you get it.

SLAM: The other day you tweeted a quote from Maya Angelou: “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

LBJ: When I read that, it was unbelievable. It almost seemed it was like perfect timing. It was like exactly what I’m going through right now. You learn a lot from those who’ve paved the way for all of us.

SLAM: Do you feel a little beat up right now?

LBJ: Nooo. I feel refreshed. I’m ready.

SLAM: Not physically, I just mean from everything else.

LBJ: Well, I don’t feel beat up, not at all. I knew there was going to be some negative point to it. But at the end of the day, I think I made the right decision, and I’m happy with my decision. Just like you said, you can’t make everyone happy at the end of the day, and I knew that, I knew that from the beginning. And I understand. It’s OK.

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  • The Philosopher

    LONG… LIVE… THE KING!!!

  • Big Clover

    no delonte question?

  • Darius

    thats right LBJ do u

  • http://www.kaycephotography.com/ Kevin

    big interview Lang, good lil preview scoop to get us interested.. can’t wait for the season to start.

  • http://www.kylestack.com Kyle Stack

    Good interview. Can’t say I’d be surprised if he came closer than ever before to averaging a triple-double.

  • lebronking

    LONG… LIVE… THE KING!!!

  • http://twitter.com/kevinchung Kevin

    big interview Lang, good lil preview scoop to get us interested.. can’t wait for the season to get started

  • http://www.slamonline.com J

    “you can’t make everyone happy..”

  • LA Huey

    The Philosopher is quite the character.
    btw, Good interview, Lang.

  • http://google c_cantrell

    nice.. pretty pumped to watch the heat play this season

  • http://slamonline.com/ Tzvi Twersky

    sikk.

  • Ali

    Sounds like he’s saying all the right things…patiently waiting for the season to tip off so we can see this this new look big three in the MIA. Gonna be some sad faces in MIA if they don’t win it all…

  • http://stapledesign.com Spaceship Jay

    Yeah, Boston was just too consistent.

  • http://eastofeden55@hotmail.com Waggle

    “gel” year. not jell-o

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Hmmm…..

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Couldn’t get face time with Bron, Lang….it was a phoner? That’s a bit strange….was there a photo shoot or is there going to be stock images used? These are the hard-hitting questions I need answered!!!!!

  • http://slamonline.com Lang Whitaker

    @Waggle: “Gel” is for hair. “Jell” is for teams.

  • http://slamonline.com Lang Whitaker

    @Eboy: Couldn’t do it in person because it all came together really quickly. Which was fine with me. Cover photo isn’t from a SLAM shoot, but it is an exclusive image.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Thanks, Lang. I’m pretty sure I’m going to be waiting impatiently by the mailbox every evening when I’m through working. Can’t wait.

  • Pingback:   Talking With LeBron James – SLAM Online (blog) by Lebron James Miami Heat Basketball

  • Overtime

    I’m not a particular fan of his, but I respect that the decision he made was the one for him, and his to make. Also, there’s no questioning his work ethic. You dont get that good without hard work.

    Also, on the subject of the covers, I really hope one is James, one is Wade, and the Slamadamonth is Bosh’s face when he found out

  • http://www.slamonline.com/ Myles Brown

    Great questions Lang. I wouldve asked who gets to sleep in the top bunk though….

  • http://joeloholic.wordpress.com Joel O’s

    Hmm. Honestly, Lebron looks surreal in that Heat jersey.

  • T-Money

    I like the fact that he’s unapologetic about his move. At the end of the day, he did what he wanted to do and didn’t let pundits dictate how his career should play out or what model he should follow. Miami is being portrayed as the easy way out but I’m not sure it was. He turned his back on Cleveland, gave up cash, accepted to share the spotlight and sacrificed numbers. All to give him the best chance to win. That’s not an easy decision to make.

  • Chi-Town Stand Up

    Although I’m not the biggest Lebron fan, I remember last year around all-star break where a commentator asked him what his ideal stat line would be and he said 22 10 and 10! I think he’ll have a very good shot at those averages this year if Pat Riley lets him be the full time PG! D-Wade can play some point as well, but Lebron is a naturally unselfish player, which is why for him he had no problem teaming with wade and Bosh in Miami! All Riley has to do is show Lebron some old footage of Magic Johnson and tell him thats what his goal should be this year! To become the best PG in the league at 6’8! Who would be able to match up with a 6’8 PG?

  • The Philosopher

    @Chi-Town…
    Preach.

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tri4HZnPD0Q Witness

    Click my name. You’ll like it.

  • T-Money

    I was really surprised to hear Riley say on LeBatard’s show that, not only will we see a lot of Wade-Bron-Miller together on the perimeter, but it actually might be the starting unit at some point during the season. Time to show and prove for Mario or else they’ll package him with other guys for a center at the deadline. A point guard is not a necessity on this team.

  • T-Money

    Allenp: Kobe who was himself the anti-AI (clean cut, well spoken, “respected” the game)…

  • T-Money

    wrong window.

  • Jake

    I will happily call myself a hater and say that if they don’t win a championship this year I’ll wear my shoes out from dancing circles around my room.

  • http://www.bulls.com Enigmatic

    Yeah, I remember watching Bron’s high school games on tv and thinking whoever gets this kid (well, we’re the same age so it was more like “dude”, not “kid”…anyways) needs to play him at the Point. I always thought he was more of “the next Magic” anyways. If Spro and Riley decide on a line-up of 1. LeBron, 2. Wade and 3. Miller, that would be SICK. I’n in NO way a Miami Heat fan, I hated them since the days of ‘Zo, Timmy and ‘em, but you’d have to be stupid to not believe they’ll be the most exciting team next year.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy
  • http://www.rich-imaging.com Dutch Rich

    Something tells me that “The Decision” will be the most regrettable thing in his professional life. And that this Miami adventure might not have a happy ending. Just a feeling I’m having. Btw, he looks not surreal but amazingly average in that Heat jersey. Jamaal Mashburn average. No hating on Jamaal but we’re taking about Lebron here. New slogan for Nike;
    “The Emperor without his Clothes”
    Send payment to the Rabobank accnt# 753896

  • Vince R

    Labron IS and WAS entitled to go where he wanted.
    He did it by the rules……
    What Labron has not and I suspect will never say is why, IN MAY 2010 after the Cav’s were eliminated, WHY…. did he not tell ownership who had paid him Millions over 7 years……
    WHY…. did he not tell the Cleveland Fans who were obligated to re-up NOT KNOWING……
    WHY…. did he STAGE A CIRCUS EVENT doing little more that a perceived HYPE…although he missed by a long shot on this one.

    I suspect he’ll win if all stay healthy
    I suspect he’ll Make untold millions
    ……….what he won’t gain IS RESPECT
    After playing days are long past…..I believe he’ll
    understand how misguided his actions in 2010 were.
    ……..DO I BELIEVE he’ll admit same…probably not.

  • CoachK

    Bron definitely did the right thing. No one can say he is taking the easy way out. Jordan can criticize, but he played with Pippen and Rodman/Grant. Pippen is top 50 all time, and Rodman/Grant are comparable to Bosh. Not all that different.

    Basketball ultimately is a team sport and i applaud Lebron for being unselfish in this sense. If some of these stars are so hell bent on individual accolades or competing against another star, go play tennis or go box!

  • PapaBearATL

    This kid has been set up for HATE from day one! You call a KID, King James before he ever set foot on a NBA court, immediately compare him to MJ based on his athletic ability alone, tell him how great he is, so he promises Cleveland a ‘chip. He doesn’t have the talent around him and doesn’t produce and heads for ‘greener pastures’. Did everyone forget when Kobe was demanding to be traded? Leading a TEAM and having four other dudes on the court are not the same. Kobe needed, Magic and MJ had help. Look at Laker/Celtic dynasties and tell me they weren’t stacked? He was a ‘FREEE’ agent, his choice, his decision. I’m not even a fan, I just hate how short term the memories of all these bball minds are when it comes to the person ‘THEY’ put on the pedestal and are disappointed when it turns out he’s human like the rest of us and only desires to be succesful at his craft.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    @PapabearATL: I don’t think anyone is begrudging him his motives, people dislike the manner in which he did it. He silently dissed Cleveland, just straight-up left without even telling the owner his intentions, and had an hour-long special on it all…people didn’t like that. The fact that he went to Miami? Whatever, it’s his choice.

  • kobe24

    are there outstanding players like dwyane wade, kobe, lebron, Melo, in the NFL ?

  • PapaBearATL

    @Moose: The media built this ‘larger than the NBA’ aura around him, maybe he’s become a bit of megalomaniac, he was put in a position to feel he could do no wrong. An hour long TV program to dump on his home team seemed like a great ‘idea’ to him and I guess giving the proceeds to charity was supposed to soften the blow. Barkley and Magic specifically called him out on teaming with other stars, though.

  • http://dfjklf.com Jukai

    Nothing would make me happier than seeing a Lebron-Wade-Miller-Bosh-Big Z lineup when the season starts. Scariest starting lineup hands down. Floor is spread, it can go fast (as long as Z trains in outletting), lots of ball movement, and a damn matchup nightmare.
    Chalmers is for the breaks, House is for three-point shooting at the end. Arroyo has no real value to the team.
    Damn, let this season start

  • http://www.dontevenreply.com total scrotal implosion

    Id love to see bron avg a tripdub. Its very possible.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    I want to see LeBron average 15 points, 14 assists and 9 rebounds. Emphasis on the 15 points/14 dimes.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    One note to all of this. Public Knowledge the year magic came into the NBA. He would have turned down the league had the Lakers not won the coinflip for the 1st pick. He only wanted to play for a team that would give him the opportunity to compete for a championship. (The Lakers had Kareem, the Bulls as the time, nobody). He is even quoted as saying “If it wasn’t for Kareem and the Lakers, I would not have come out (speaking of michigan state) Not anything unlike LeBron’s decision, substitute the draft for free agency

  • @jcheat305

    He’s gonna make all the haters swallow their words this year!!! Can’t wait!!!

  • Pingback: nba musings » oh lebron, boo hoo for you

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    @ Jukai: Arroyo can still be a spark off the bench and break down the unsuspecting defenses. That looks like a great line-up.

  • http://Slamonline.com Ben Osborne

    Great stuff, Lang. I’m psyched to show new covers and get new issue out there. It’s been a long summer…

  • http://www.joelkimmel.com Joel Kimmel

    Great interview, Lang. I’m not rooting for the Heat, but they’ll be fun to watch.

  • http://www.solecollector.com NDP

    Dutch Rich — The execution of it, yes. The team will play excellently on-court though. And who knows, Erick Dampier will be waived at some point and would be a decent and very realistic mid-season signing as well to help out the frontline as they go into the playoffs.

    While his all-time scoring rank will surely take a hit, I think it’s more important to Bron that he finishes his career with 3-5 rings and averages a triple-double for at least two seasons. When he’s 40, THAT will be success to him. There’s no underestimating how important averaging a triple-double is to him.

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