PaulieWal wrote:Heej wrote:NGL tho is it just me or did AD and Rondo low key commit a micro coup with that switching of the Playcall. Cuz AD in the post-game interview was like "I went to Rondo on the side and said nah give me the ball" and Vogel legit said Rondo came up to him and whispered in his ear "do you want me to inbound the ball?". And Vogel was like yeah go for it. Lmaoooo so my little conspiracy theory is that AD Lebron and Rondo both know AD gotta take over eventually and LeBron's expecting to get 1 more year as the man wearing 23 and AD and Rondo are like nah ADs hungry and wants that mantle now. It just seemed a little more personal to AD
How do y'all even come up with this stuff? Going back to his rookie year, the one thing LeBron has never shied away from is having the last play being drawn up for someone else or having the ball himself and passing it to someone else to score. I highly doubt when he knew his offense wasn't even on he would care one iota that the ball was going to AD. No way Rondo and AD are just changing the playcall on their own like that.
Lmao you may be right about that, but I'd also to point out that LeBron is also very thirsty to take those shots too like the one where he said he scratched David Blatt's play.
And it might really be just based on a whole lot of nothing. I guess it was just the vibe of ADs post-game interview that made me think this shot was personal to him. Cuz I've seen this kind of energy before on basketball teams I've been on when I was younger where there's a young alpha coming into his own that wants to step out of the older and more established alpha's shadow. And it's not malicious, just a big bro-little bro "I'm HERE now" kind of moment.
And TBH I love to see it because that's what true greatness is made of. To demand those moments and those shots. Coincidentally this is why I think I'll always believe in Kuz panning out eventually and his mentality. Because I personally believe every player needs to be both maximally invested yet slightly uncomfortable in their own role in order to develop. Kuz is 100% invested in being the best that he can be in the role that he's in but he'll never give up on reaching that star role either which I like. And TBH you even saw some of that hunger for more in Danny Green yesterday when he took it coast to coast on that layup instead of giving it up. It's little micro-victories here and there that build your game up.
There's this one elite NBA trainer Drew Hanlen who trains a bunch of guys like Beal, Tatum, Embiid, etc who preaches mastering the role that you're in but working towards the role that you want. And that's kind of what I saw with AD in that he's mastering the 1a/1b role whichever one he's in right now but he's 10000% working towards taking over as the undisputed alpha from LeBron and not being content in being the older alphas shadow (again, not maliciously this is just part of the growth arc of an all time great cuz they're mentally different).
This is also why Kuz is taking his matchup with MPJ so damn personally because they're both the types of guys that will always work towards that star role while simultaneously trying to make the most out of the complementary role that they're in. So yeah, I'm sure it sounds just stupid to you that there's any kind of turmoil over this; but to me this is kind of just what I've seen of basketball as a microcosm of human nature and the inherent friction you see with the turning of generations.


 





















