Has LeBron James become boring to watch?

By Mark Pybus / Roar Guru

The story of LeBron James is well documented. Whether you love him or hate him, you would agree that he is a superstar of the NBA.

He has battled his way through plenty of criticism, failed playoff campaigns, the infamous Decision and the fallout from the super team formation.

Now with two championships under his belt and a host of MVP awards it appears that LeBron has found his groove and is comfortable with his game and life in general.

With the weight of the world now off his shoulders and nothing really to prove, is he now a bit boring to watch?

This of course is a subjective theory based on preference and I’m sure there will be plenty of disagreement but hear me out first.

My reasoning for this theory is based on what the main theme for this season is, what I want to see when I watch an NBA player and of course what LeBron actually does on the court.

Watching LeBron in his Cleveland and early Miami days was interesting because there was a story there. He was the basketball prodigy from Akron that dominated everyone in his path and declared for the NBA Draft straight out of high school.

The spotlight was on him since day one and the ongoing saga around whether he was good enough to lead his team to an NBA title and his occasional disappearance in big game moments was fascinating.

It was a curious experience to watch LeBron play. He was out-of-this-world talented and you wanted to see how good he could be on every night.

Was he the next Michael Jordan? Could he lead his Cavs into the promised land?

Fast forward to 2013 with Miami winning the last two titles and LeBron the last three MVP awards and my enthusiasm to see him play is at an all time low.

Given he is at the peak of his prime and playing on a winning team I began to wonder why I don’t view him as one of the most watchable players in the NBA right now.

The story following LeBron and Miami around is all about the three-peat and this of course mainly has nothing to do with the regular season.

Miami are expected to walk through the season without a problem so why bother watching them during the regular season if LeBron isn’t producing historic numbers?

I look at his very impressive numbers, 26.0ppg on 59.5%, 6.3apg and 5.8rpg and I’m not really that impressed.

This is meant to be a walking triple double with the best all round game since Jordan and yet per 36 mins he isn’t having his best season (apart from FG%/3P%).

He is wildly efficient with his scoring but no one buys a sports car because it is efficient, they buy it for the amazing things it can do and I feel LeBron is sleep walking through this season on cruise control.

I understand that it’s a long season and the playoffs are important but the NBA is in the entertainment business and I know this is a simple way of looking at it but the players are essentially paid to entertain the fans.

Watching a guy play at what feels like 80% of his potential is disappointing and almost a slap in the face to the fans.

Another contributing factor is the sheer size of him. At 6ft8 and roughly 280lbs he is a physical specimen with the size of a PF and the speed of a PG.

When he gets up a head of steam, players are just getting out of the way now instead of trying to contesting the shot.

This means that his dunks, while spectacular, are sometimes a bit hollow.

He doesn’t posterise anyone because everyone vacates the paint quicker than the Miami crowd with a minute left in Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals.

This isn’t a criticism of him because he can’t ask players to step in and contest his drives; it’s more of a frustration at the players “defending” him.

I guess it all comes down to expectation and reality. If any other player was posting these numbers (Durant is close) then they would be the talk of the league and praise would be flying in from every corner of the planet.

Numbers aside I would rather watch a Steph Curry, Kobe Bryant (when healthy), Russell Westbrook, Kevin Durant or even a Michael Carter Williams because they are entertaining on most nights.

Crazy shots, hot scoring streaks, flashy passing (not due to their size) and impressive dribble moves are what I want to see.

Having said that I am one to enjoy just watching a Kyle Korver or Ray Allen fight through a dozen screens just to get a half second window to catch and shoot a three ball.

Do I want LeBron to knock down 60+ points and stand in the middle of the court screaming “Are you not entertained?” while tigers roam the sidelines?

Sometimes it would be nice if he forgot about the team objective and proved to us fans why he is one of the greatest players of all time.

I want more Lamborgini excitement and craziness and less Toyota efficiency and practicality LeBron!

Roarers, do you see LeBron’s game as slightly boring or do you enjoy what he is doing this season?

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-19T21:07:39+00:00

Aaron

Guest


Mark, your very last comment in this thread mirrors my opinion: "I want to see the marketable stars in this league play their hardest." I'm a Lebron fan and essentially want him to win at the end of the day, but there's also the aspect of entertainment, and the relationship between "entertainer and viewer." I like certain actors, but if the movie they're in sucks or does not entertain me, I can/will just watch an old one that I know does, but that lasts only so many times. They are also paid entertainers. Lebron may be bored himself, which I get, but it's frustrating getting excited about a Cavs game coming on only to be deflated by the 2nd quarter because the offense is simply playing efficiently. Put James Harden or Westbrook on any day, and I'm tuning in knowing it will be more of a show. It may be because they've never won, but there are endless Jordan highlights from all 6 ships. No excuses here.

2014-06-03T05:10:10+00:00

luke

Guest


dang I got carried away like always. This is why I can't watch bad for my health. The whole point being to watch a guy basically set himself up to where he never has to push himself again it's such a waste of talent and lack of heart. In my humble opinion of course.

2014-06-03T05:00:09+00:00

luke

Guest


This is how I knew it would be when I quit watching in 2010... and yes as an nba fan for life at heart, it still feels like a slap in the face. Giving the fans something remember is not worth the risk of appearing human. Agendas must be fulfilled even if it means kneecapping the competition. Oh look, another alley oop. Yawn...

2014-03-26T09:45:55+00:00

Tldub

Guest


Let me get this right. We're supposed to call someone the greatest player on the planet for their passing? And I watch all Heat games what passes are u talking about. U must be confusing those with Magic Johnson passes Smh. LeBron has always been boring. Perfect article

2013-12-09T06:01:22+00:00

Zee

Roar Guru


Defiantly not, I may be biased being a Heat Supporter but this guy is the Greg Inglis of the NBA. An Absolute superstar, and an unpredictable one. LJ has plenty to offer yet

2013-12-09T04:20:05+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Some very disturbing comments being written around here . . .

2013-12-09T03:34:48+00:00

mushi

Guest


So you like people taking lots of jump shots and then gambling on defence?

2013-12-08T22:23:27+00:00

muzz

Guest


tru that!

AUTHOR

2013-12-08T11:08:51+00:00

Mark Pybus

Roar Guru


I think most players would have been sat down when the team is up by 20 so cant really blame Spo for resting him. Almost got the QD with his TO count.

2013-12-08T03:36:21+00:00

Marcus Halberstram

Guest


he appears to have no individual ambition at the moment. Gave away a triple double today because the team were home. This is going to make his season boring on a personal level. Durant will take out the MVP.

2013-12-07T11:24:50+00:00

hadeez

Guest


LeBron, although my fav player... I'd have to agree with you 100%. He is becoming so BOOOORING to watch.

2013-12-06T09:55:11+00:00

Marcus Halberstram

Guest


Agreed. He is playing less minutes as well. Today, did they actually pull him out when behind because they did not think they could catch the Bulls (or did not care to)?

2013-12-06T09:50:28+00:00

Marcus Halberstram

Guest


I agree with you on one level Mark. Lebron gives the impression he could take opposition apart (ie 50/60 point games). He actually believes it himself. It would be good every now and then to see him at least attempt it. It seems at times that that is exactly what his team needs. But he always goes this team first route. It is frustrating.

2013-12-06T09:38:25+00:00

Marcus Halberstram

Guest


point me to footage of this. It is myth.

AUTHOR

2013-12-06T06:01:24+00:00

Mark Pybus

Roar Guru


I love watching Steph Curry/Klay Thompson and they are not losing. By flashy basketball I do not mean as iso heavy chuck up shots type play, I think people are taking that the wrong way.

AUTHOR

2013-12-06T05:54:32+00:00

Mark Pybus

Roar Guru


Hi Ryan, I understand there is more to basketball than flashy moves and three pointers but watching certain players is more interesting to me than watching LeBron this season.It was half written from a casual fan's perspective who want to see the marketable stars of the league play their hardest for most of the season and I don't think LeBron is doing that.

2013-12-06T05:40:51+00:00

Ian Whitchurch

Guest


I see your problem. You like the kind of flashy basketball that loses games.

2013-12-06T05:39:18+00:00

Eliot Bingham

Roar Pro


I like watching LeBron getting carried off the court with 'cramps'.

AUTHOR

2013-12-06T05:34:09+00:00

Mark Pybus

Roar Guru


I'm not the biggest fan of Durant's new metrics based approach to shooting. From this article (http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/kevin-durant-explains-friendly-rivalry-lebron-james-hires-225020480--nba.html) "Durant has hired his own analytics expert. He tailors workouts to remedy numerical imbalances. He harps on efficiency more than a Prius dealer. To Durant, basketball is an orchard, and every shot an apple. “Let’s say you’ve got 40 apples on your tree,” Durant explains. “I could eat about 30 of them, but I’ve begun limiting myself to 15 or 16. Let’s take the wide-open three and the post-up at the nail. Those are good apples. Let’s throw out the pull-up three in transition and the step-back fadeaway. Those are rotten apples. The three at the top of the circle — that’s an in-between apple. We only want the very best on the tree.”

2013-12-06T05:13:42+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Oh geez . . . Don't get me started. An utter disgrace. And a classic example of getting bored, or letting emotion rule your decision. Derrick Rose's MVP season is an underrated 'WTF?' decision, by the way.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar