This was the moment for me that I’ll never forget. He held it down, carried the torch, and he finished the job.
No one can tell me anything about his Laker tenure. No one.
Literally saved a franchise from the mud, promised us a chip, and delivered not to mention staying through all the bs this F/O has done
If this is it.. we can say alot but I’ll keep it short… Thank you for everything you’ve done for LAL
@Barthazian Nothing in my post suggested that wealthy people unable to learn how to dress well. I agree they are typically focused on other things. However, I disagree that cultivating a sense of style is a "pointless endeavor," as you suggested. I can think of worse ways to spend your time
If tonight is curtains on our season, I can positively say that I had the most fun watching this team probably since 2023. Too many memorable moments to write down.
Didn’t end how we wanted and we got cursed with injuries once again, and I hate playing the what if game, but I won’t take March and all the other moments for granted.
With that said, let’s go LakeShow. 💛💜
@SoundbiteKing You and LeBron James are both 41. He's the leading scorer in a playoff series vs the team with the best record in the NBA, while you're on a podcast talking about him. Let's keep things in perspective.
This manufactured run by OKC over the last two seasons isn’t just because of Shai’s whistle— Oh no, it’s death by 1,000 paper-cuts when it comes to OKC.
- On this first play Lu Dort holds Ayton, then as Ayton tries to get him off, Dort flops to the ground. Foul on the Lakers.
- The next play, Ajay Mitchell and Jarred Vanderbilt are holding each other, then Mitchell flops to the ground, pretending he was pushed. Foul on the Lakers.
Do you see the theme?? These happen all game, every game with OKC, and they always get the whistle. More importantly, these usually take place during key parts of the game that shifts the momentum in their favor.
Basketball fans are over this!! 🔥🔥
No player in NBA history gets more shit for being on "super teams" than LeBron does, and yet, no player in NBA history has been asked to beat far superior opponents more often than LeBron has.
That's funny to me.