LeBron should host ‘The Decision: Part 2’

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

LeBron James opted out of his contract with the Miami Heat earlier in the week, signaling his intention to once again become an NBA free agent and test the market for his once-in-a-lifetime services.

Though he is at very short odds to remain in Miami – but perhaps on a lower salaried contract – it nonetheless received the attention of every single General Manager in the NBA.

If you have the opportunity to sign the best basketball player in the world, you jump at the chance.

Needless to say, it also garnered the attention of the media and fans, because when LeBron becomes a free agent, it’s big news in the sporting world. I don’t think anyone needs reminding of what happened last time ‘The King’ was free to negotiate a contract with any team of his choosing, but perhaps a little refresher is in order.

In 2010, LeBron came to the end of his contract with the Cleveland Cavaliers, essentially his home team, plus a city for which he said a championship was the goal and that he wouldn’t stop until he got it for them. Most people assumed that LeBron was going to stay with the Cavs to make good on that promise, but there were whispers he may be seduced by the bright lights and commercial opportunities of New York, and therefore sign with the Knicks, or even the Nets.

Another potential outcome had LeBron headed to Miami to team up with fellow superstars Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, with the theory based upon a supposed pact the three players had made to each other when they were teammates on the 2008 US Olympic team.

I thought that was a preposterous notion, and never going to happen.

History will show that LeBron made the most of the media circus that surrounded his free agency destination and, in partnership with ESPN, produced a live, prime time, one-hour television special called ‘The Decision’.

It was arrogant. It was myopic. It was self-serving. But above all, it was brilliant.

In somewhat of a shock, LeBron did indeed announce he was joining the Miami Heat, with the now infamous quote, “I’m taking my talents to South Beach.”

I’m not sure anyone could have predicted what happened next. It was the lead story across US media outlets for days. There was rioting in Cleveland. There was absolute disbelief from retired NBA legends, disgusted that LeBron would team up with other stars rather than trying to win by himself.

Social media went ballistic. Cleveland owner Dan Gilbert took out a full-page ad lambasting LeBron. The Miami Heat became the team everyone hated, and everyone wanted to beat.

LeBron went from a beloved and respected NBA superstar, to universally despised. For a short time, he may have been the most hated man in America. Seriously.

And NBA writers dined out on the subsequent storylines for well over a year. It’s also worth pointing out that NBA ratings soared the next season, with interest in the NBA at an all-time high.

Every great story needs a villain, and though LeBron wasn’t whom everyone would have predicted to take on that role, he cast himself in it. He was nothing short of brilliant as the surprise ‘baddie’, even if it wasn’t his intention.

LeBron eventually won back a lot of respect and a little bit of love, not just by maturing, but by winning his first championship, followed by another, and leading the Heat to four consecutive NBA finals appearances.

There is no doubt that LeBron has grown up a lot over the last four years; he has said he learnt a lot from ‘The Decision’ and how he handled himself and his business in his departure from Cleveland.

There is zero indication that he’ll be announcing his free agency destination in the same manner as last time, for which I am bitterly disappointed.

This is a tremendous opportunity to create one of the biggest news stories in sport. Again.

I’m well aware of the sentiment that sequels are never as good as the original, but that’s not necessarily always true. The Godfather: Part II is widely regarded as superior to The Godfather. It can happen.

Stop for a minute, and imagine if LeBron hosted a TV special called ‘The Decision: Part 2 – This time I’m taking my talents to LA’.

Forget the imaginary destination I wrote there, that was simply the city I used because I’m a Lakers homeboy. The landing spot is irrelevant. But LeBron trolling the entire universe by doing the whole thing all over again? That’s relevant.

Twitter would have a meltdown. LeBron haters would self-combust. Meme generators would implode.

The internet might actually break.

For all the grief that LeBron rightfully received for ‘The Decision’, it was brilliant theatre. It was drama personified, and better than any other reality TV program in history. It revitalised the NBA. It was historic. And LeBron has the chance to do it all again.

I’d love if LeBron decided, “What the hell, let’s do it again for a laugh.”

‘The Decision: Part 2 – This time I’m taking my talents to LA’.

C’mon LeBron, make it happen.

The Crowd Says:

2014-06-26T13:04:47+00:00

Mark Pybus

Roar Guru


Somehow I don't think he has the sense of humour for it. It would be funny to see at first but very quickly become tragic. Like you said I don't see him leaving Miami but if wanted to expand his legacy (which everyone says he does care about) then heading to the Western Conference instead of feeding off the weak East might do more wonders than potentially teaming up with four All-Stars for another title run.

2014-06-26T08:56:43+00:00

Steele

Guest


It'd be brilliant! Thumbing his nose at virtually everyone and doing it all over again. Maybe he could team up with Durant and really get the haters going?

AUTHOR

2014-06-26T08:14:38+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


You're kidding, right? Kobe 'let' Dwight Howard come to LA, and he hated him. I'm pretty sure Kobe would love to have LeBron sign with the Lakers. It's not going to happen, but it's not because Kobe wouldn't let it.

2014-06-26T07:55:40+00:00

Graham Sanyo

Guest


With his physical presence & jumping ability he'd be a useful AFL draftee. Brilliant publicity for GWS or The Suns. But has anyone in AFL land got the brains to approach his management? No. And know what, it's probably just the type of challenge he'd be up for.

2014-06-26T07:43:12+00:00

patty

Guest


Kobe won't let lebron come to the Lakers. .it would be a disaster for his gigantic ego..remember shaq

2014-06-26T06:27:35+00:00

factor

Guest


who everyone would have predicted...

2014-06-26T04:11:35+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Guest


I cannot be embarrassed when it comes to my love of the Lakers. Cannot! Will not!

2014-06-26T03:44:35+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


"...that was simply the city I used because I’m a Lakers homeboy." Oh yeah. This is coming up again in the very near future...

AUTHOR

2014-06-26T03:07:57+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


The Lakers, of course!

2014-06-26T01:42:09+00:00

astro

Guest


And isn't that what every owner, GM and coach has tried to do since the beginnings of the game? Build the best team possible, with the best player, in order to win a title?

2014-06-26T01:38:49+00:00

Brendan

Guest


Cavs should take that and offer, they will be a contender in the east. Deep draft plus 2 way guard to help out kyrie. Draft Embied with 4 + outside shooter at 12. Then you have a team JLB can contend with.. come home and complete the fairy tale & be loved by all..... HAHAHAHAH... nope Cavs not happening.

2014-06-26T01:33:09+00:00

Chaos

Guest


At least Houston are meeting with both LeBron and Melo. Don't think we're likely on either, but at least we have our hat in the ring. ps did you hear that this: Bill Simmons ‏@BillSimmons 6h According to @chadfordinsider - the Cavs got offered 4, 12 + Afflalo for 1 and didn't immediately say "Yes please?" That happened????

2014-06-26T01:26:59+00:00

Brendan

Guest


Ryan, any thoughts/preferences on where he should or might go if he leaves? As an asisde, I see that Miami is trading up in the draft to secure talent that keeps LBJ happy...

2014-06-26T01:25:44+00:00

Brendan

Guest


Always play to win, why bother otherwise. Agree Ryan, the lead up to The Decision 2 would be massive... The fallout would not be as bad though, I dont think if it were to happen we would still be talking about it like were are the original Decision 4 years later.

2014-06-26T01:20:10+00:00

Badi

Guest


from memory Gilbert didn't own the cavs when they drafted lebron, it was some guy named gund - memory might be off but it was the gund arena in cleveland wasn't it? something like that. Either way, gilbert bought the cavs at what was probably a premium because it had lebron on it. Lebron leaving no doubt cost him money. That all said I agree that Gilbert is a grub and an idiot, you don't burn bridges, its that simple. Lebron would have to be a very forgiving man, or really care about what people in Ohio think of him to work for gilbert again

AUTHOR

2014-06-26T01:01:39+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


It was a train wreck. A beautiful train wreck.

AUTHOR

2014-06-26T01:00:36+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


The 'chasing rings' knock is ridiculous in many ways. While I understand people's objections with teaming up with fellow superstars, the intent/motivation behind it should never be criticised. The objective is to win, right? In terms of the fall-out if LeBron did The Decision 2, I'll have to respectfully disagree. I think it would be massive! It would be the ultimate in trolling!

2014-06-26T00:37:03+00:00

P. Marlowe

Guest


Did you see the Steve Carrell/Paul Rudd spoof of the Decision? Look it up on YouTube..

2014-06-25T23:23:36+00:00

astro

Guest


Two great best/worst things about The Decision for me... 1. The angle that it was done for charity...and having the kids in the background! Unbelievable... 2. Lebron face throughout...you could just tell he was only realising how bad the decision to have The Decision was, once it was happening. In my mind, an equally big loser from The Decision though, was Cavs owner Dan Gilbert. That letter was amazingly dumb. Here's a guy who made millions on millions from being lucky enough to draft Lebron and have him for 7 years, most of which he was paying him $4-5mil per season, and he throws a kid's tantrum when he leaves. The whole thing really was bizarre! Bring it on again!

2014-06-25T23:13:02+00:00

Brendan

Guest


I don't think it would get the hype and negative fallout as the decision V1 because: 1. Even the Lebron haters cant deny hes a champion because he has the all important ringz now... 2. By doing exactly what pissed everyone off last time people would realise that Lebron doesn't actually give a you know what about what anyone thinks. Im no Lebron/heat fanboy either (rose/bulls for me) but he cant get paid anywhere near what value he brings to the league so whats wrong with chasing ringz..?

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar