James: Spurs took something from me in ’07
MIAMI—Before reaching the pinnacle of professional basketball, LeBron James was run over by the San Antonio Spurs.
The Spurs swept James’ Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2007 NBA Finals, so long ago that the winning game plan focused on exploiting James’ weaknesses. Those are nearly impossible to find now, and James essentially warned the Spurs that they shouldn’t bother looking.
The Spurs already know.
Article continues after this advertisement“He’ll be a lot more of a problem than he was in ’07, that’s for sure,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said Wednesday on the eve of their best-of-seven Final series here.
Tim Duncan told the beaten James minutes after that series that the league would someday belong to him, and he was right. The NBA’s Most Valuable Player guided Miami to last year’s championship and the league’s best record this season.
Now the Spurs will try to take it back.
Article continues after this advertisementBut James is now the best player in the game, is surrounded by more talent in Miami than he ever had in Cleveland, and still carries the memory of the beating the Spurs dealt him six years ago.
“I have something in me that they took in ’07. Beat us on our home floor, celebrated on our home floor. I won’t forget that. You shouldn’t as a competitor. You should never forget that,” James said.
He joined the Heat in 2010, experienced more finals failure a year later, then was finals MVP last year when Miami beat Oklahoma City in five games. Another title now would put him halfway to the four that Duncan and Popovich have won together.
“That’s what I’m here for,” James said. “I’m here to win championships, and you’re not always going to be on the successful side. I’ve seen it twice, not being on the successful side.”
He was just 22 at the end of his fourth year in the league when he carried the Cavs to their first finals appearance. But there were holes in his game, from an unreliable jump shot to an undeveloped post game, and the Spurs took advantage of every one of them.
James shot 36 percent in the series, including 10 for 30 in Game 4, and committed 23 turnovers.
“Well, LeBron is a different player than he was in ’07,” Popovich said. “That was like ancient history.” AP