Savor This Sunday's Matchup Between LeBron and Kobe
On Sunday, the Cleveland Cavaliers will host the L.A. Lakers in a nationally televised game. This will be the second and final meeting between these teams this season unless they both make it to the NBA Finals. The great Tom Callahan once described the vibe of Julius Erving's 1987 "Farewell Tour" as "savoring and being savored." Hopefully, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James will both be playing for many years to come but--as recent injuries to Andrew Bynum and Jameer Nelson show--you never know what is coming up just around the bend, so "savoring and being savored" is definitely the right attitude to have any time the two best players in the NBA compete against each other. Another Tom Callahan phrase also applies to this showdown: "The Best the Game Offers," his 1982 description of Larry Bird and Julius Erving. As I write in my newest piece for CavsNews.com, that is a perfect description of Bryant and James (6/17/15 edit: the link to CavsNews.com no longer works, so I have posted the original article below):
This Sunday’s
showdown between the Cleveland Cavaliers and L.A. Lakers should be savored for
many reasons: the teams only meet twice a year, this may be an NBA Finals
preview and the superstar matchup between LeBron James and Kobe Bryant
features—to borrow the
title of one of my favorite basketball articles ever—“The Best the Game
Offers”; that description fit Larry Bird and Julius Erving when Tom Callahan
penned those words in 1982 and it definitely applies to James and Bryant today.
There are even parallels in terms of the age difference, size disparity and
stylistic contrasts with those two duos; Bird and James were/are bigger and six
years younger than their main rival and were/are considered to be more “pass
first” oriented even though Erving and Bryant were/are underrated playmakers.
Bryant just
won the Western Conference Player of the Month for January after averaging 27.2
ppg, 5.9 rpg and 7.1 apg while leading the Lakers to a 12-4 record. He had six
30 point games, two triple doubles and four consecutive games with double digit
assists; James claimed Eastern Conference Player of the Month honors for
January with averages of 27.5 ppg, 9.6 rpg and 8.2 apg, the first player to
reach those levels in each category in the same calendar month since Bird in
March 1987. James had six 30 point games and three triple doubles as the Cavs
went 10-4. Most readers probably know that I give Bryant a slight edge over
James due to the greater completeness of Bryant’s skill set—Bryant is shooting
.349 from three point range and .860 on free throws while James is shooting
just .295 and .763 respectively from those ranges; Bryant also is a much better
midrange jump shooter than James—but they are both putting up mind boggling
numbers this season. Even more importantly, James and Bryant embrace the
challenge at the defensive end of the court and—no matter what anyone
says--they have separated themselves from every other great player in the
league.
Bryant and the Lakers got the best of James and the
Cavs 105-88
two weeks ago in Los Angeles but—assuming that the Cavs take care of Toronto on Tuesday night—Cleveland will own a 23-0 home record when
the Lakers arrive at the Q. The Cavs were without the services of Zydrunas
Ilgauskas when the Lakers beat them but this time around the Lakers will be
sans Andrew Bynum, who will be out for at least eight weeks after tearing the
MCL in his right knee. Those injuries are yet another reminder of why we should
all savor Sunday’s game: no one knows how many times James and Bryant will have
the opportunity to play against each other when both players are at the height
of their powers while leading championship contending squads; just five years
after Callahan’s article appeared, Bird had already won his final championship and
MVP and Erving had retired.
Labels: Cleveland Cavaliers, Kobe Bryant, L.A. Lakers, LeBron James
posted by David Friedman @ 10:06 PM
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