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Rule #1

Pacers Digest is intended to be a place to discuss basketball without having to deal with the kinds of behaviors or attitudes that distract people from sticking with the discussion of the topics at hand. These unwanted distractions can come in many forms, and admittedly it can sometimes be tricky to pin down each and every kind that can rear its ugly head, but we feel that the following examples and explanations cover at least a good portion of that ground and should at least give people a pretty good idea of the kinds of things we actively discourage:

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Now, does the above cover absolutely every single kind of distraction that is unwanted? Probably not, but you should by now have a good idea of the general types of things we will be discouraging. The above examples are meant to give you a good feel for / idea of what we're looking for. If something new or different than the above happens to come along and results in the same problem (that being, any other attitude or behavior that ultimately distracts from actually just discussing the topic at hand, or that is otherwise disrespectful to other posters), we can and we will take action to curb this as well, so please don't take this to mean that if you managed to technically avoid saying something exactly like one of the above examples that you are then somehow off the hook.

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Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

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  • #31
    Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

    Originally posted by Sookie View Post
    I've noticed that PG gets a lot of respect from Superstars, especially during the All Star Game. Lebron obviously, but Kobe stopped him to talk to him for a while. As well as a few other players. I think he's a likeable guy.

    I am genuinely irritated by Lebron as a player. I know he's great, but I don't really enjoy watching him play..and he comes off as entitled, a flop artist, and whiny. But although Lebron has his faults as a person, for the most part I like his personality and I think he really likes to be liked. (nothing wrong with that.) I always thought going to Miami was more about playing with his best friends than creating a super team.
    I'm not sure if I like a guy's personality if he's a whiner, entitled and a flop artist.

    In any event, I respect LeBron's talents. He may be the best player to ever play the game.

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

      Originally posted by BlueNGold View Post
      I'm not sure if I like a guy's personality if he's a whiner, entitled and a flop artist.

      In any event, I respect LeBron's talents. He may be the best player to ever play the game.

      I suppose I just mean how he supports other athletes. I like that. He's very supportive of PG, the list goes on and on with Lebron giving respect/speaking up for certain athletes. (People I'm sure he's friends with.)

      I like someone like Durant more. But Lebron can be a good guy. You know, he's a little arrogant, but he's an athlete who got the nickname "The King" at 16 years old. But overall, Lebron does most things right off the court.

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      • #33
        Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

        Originally posted by Sookie View Post
        I suppose I just mean how he supports other athletes. I like that. He's very supportive of PG, the list goes on and on with Lebron giving respect/speaking up for certain athletes. (People I'm sure he's friends with.)

        I like someone like Durant more. But Lebron can be a good guy. You know, he's a little arrogant, but he's an athlete who got the nickname "The King" at 16 years old. But overall, Lebron does most things right off the court.
        I used to like LeBron until it became apparent he was a narcissist. I understand being called "The King" at age 16 has something to do with that...lol. But it doesn't make it better.

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        • #34
          Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

          Originally posted by yoadknux View Post
          Maybe it's just me... But it doesn't make me happy to see that happen during the game. After the game? Maybe, but as long as the game is going that guy is your #1 rival...
          I seem to remember Isaiah and Magic smoochin before the games began in the finals.
          {o,o}
          |)__)
          -"-"-

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          • #35
            Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

            I think Lebron finally realizes that PG is a superstar and that it will be a battle this whole series between the two of them
            Smothered Chicken!

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            • #36
              Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

              LeBron, while not much likeable on the court, is I think has a better personality off the court by NBA standards. I mean, all other well-known superstars have been associated with lots of off-court troubles whether it is on their private life or with their teams.AI, Kidd, Kobe, Shaq, Dwight, Jordan, and many others. So I guess I really have no problems with him personally.

              PG has really earned the respect of the superstars, and with a big stage like this, PG and James are liking the competition. They show mutual respect on the court, as evidenced by them getting at each other on both sides of the court. This will really make some excitement for casual fans going forward. A Reggie-MJ rivalry of sorts, just without the trash-talking and obvious animosity between the two.

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              • #37
                Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                On one hand it's great seeing the best player on the planet, and in my opinion in history, recognize PG like that. Not because it's "good sportsmanship" or whatever, but because it means PG's arrived.

                On the other, man I'd have loved to see PG ignore the dap and give him a Sam Cassell big balls dance.

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                • #38
                  Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                  I love waking up to stuff like this after a great victory

                  MIAMI – Every day, Paul George marched into the gymnasium on the UNLV campus and immersed himself into the education of a young basketball lifetime. As an understudy practice player for USA Basketball, his assignment was the impossible: Come take turns guarding Kobe Bryant and Kevin Durant, Carmelo Anthony and LeBron James. Come take your beating, young fella.

                  Ten months ago, the NBA's biggest stars were preparing for the Olympics in London. George was preparing for the NBA's biggest stars.

                  "We were there to be practice dummies," George said late Friday. "Guys would say, 'You understand what they're doing to us, right?' "

                  "Yeah," George responded. "So?"

                  Paul George had 22 points and six assists to LeBron James' 36 and eight boards in Game 2. (Getty Images)From the USA Select scrimmages in July to Game 2 of these Eastern Conference finals on Friday night, George had come so far, so fast, that suddenly his Pacers are standing eye-to-eye with the defending NBA champions. Suddenly, LeBron James wasn't treating George like an understudy, but a starry peer.

                  Before the stunning fourth-quarter stand that delivered the Pacers a 97-93 victory on the shores of Biscayne Bay, before a genius James' performance of 36 points and eight rebounds had been punctuated with two turnovers in the final minute, the NBA's Most Valuable Player delivered a burgeoning young star a validation of his rapid ascent.

                  After George leaped into the rafters to impale the 6-foot-10 Chris Andersen with a dunk, James rushed the ball down the floor and hit a 30-footer at the buzzer of the third period. It was a magnificent sequence, two spectacular plays within a 5.1-second window that inspired James to change direction on his way to the Heat's huddle.

                  James chased down George, reached out his hand and pressed palm on palm.

                  "I got you back, young fella," James told him.

                  For a moment, George had to gather himself. Here unfolded a most surreal scene in a surreal rise out of mid-major college basketball, the evolution of James' dutiful understudy into James' problem.

                  "That was a moment for me," George said, "that I'll always remember."

                  Two turnovers by James in the final minutes helped George and the Pacers win Game 2. (USA Today Sports)For the Pacers, this was an acknowledgment from James that they're beyond formidable, that they've grown into a genuine threat. After David West made the two deflections on James' passes in the final minute, something struck West about the Indiana celebration on the floor to commemorate a Game 2 victory: There was none. A year ago in the conference semifinals, the Pacers danced and hugged and celebrated a split in South Florida.

                  "We acted like we were glad to win a game, or glad to be able to win two games," West said.

                  This time, they act like they believe they should win the series; that they will win this series. So far, there's two telling themes unfolding: the Heat haven't an answer for Roy Hibbert; and Miami's struggles to find consistent contributions beyond the greatness of James. So far, the patience and poise of these Pacers – withstanding wave upon wave of James' onslaughts – has buoyed them.

                  The Pacers are big, strong and tough, but George is the closest they have to a traditional NBA superstar. His 22 points and six assists were a difference for these Pacers. After watching him in these first two games, James declared, "He's going to be a great one."

                  Sooner than later, too. George is 23 years old, the NBA's freshly minted Most Improved Player, and the earnestness that he brought to the USA Basketball Select Team less than a year ago has gone a long way into molding him.

                  George made a statement with his big dunk over Heat center Chris Andersen. (USA Today Sports)George made a mistake defending James on the final play of Game 1, and he wouldn't let that happen again with James' driving for redemption late Friday. Everyone rotated for these Pacers, creating an impenetrable wall between James and the rim. They turned James into a passer, and turned his passes into turnovers.

                  James became discombobulated in the final minute, as much a testament to the defensive discipline and acumen of these Pacers coaches and players. They knew what was coming – "We sniffed out their play," West said – and they responded with championship stops to usurp home-court advantage.

                  To beat these Heat – to complete one of the great upsets in the NBA history – Indiana needs more and more out of George, need him to take his first All-Star season and close it hard. Perhaps James didn't do the Heat a favor with the way that he responded to George, perhaps it was a needless gesture to inflate the confidence of a kid learning that his endless 6-foot-9 body comes out of some futuristic mail-order basketball catalog.

                  "I've got the most respect for LeBron," George said. "I look up to him."

                  Ten months ago, this was George's mandate: Get into Bryant and Durant, Anthony and James. Get into the NBA's biggest stars and learn the most valuable lessons of all. "I want to be great," George said. "I want to be a leader in this league. For me, that was a front-row seat for how to be one of the best players in this league."

                  Paul George comes fast for LeBron James now – for all of these Heat – and he's bringing the Pacers with him. He's good, on his way to great, and the planet's best player had to stop and acknowledge it. This was a night that George will never forget, a night that he truly arrived as a star in the NBA. No more understudy, no more practice dummy.

                  Wherever Paul George believed he belonged in this league, LeBron James had an unmistakable message delivered from Kobe and 'Melo and Durant on Friday night: Sooner than later, young fella, you'll be one of us.

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                  • #39
                    Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                    Lebron whining and some of the things he says has made it hard to like him. I've always loved/respected his game though. He is an amazing player and its fun to watch. Seeing them show respect for each other is cool to me. Its not like during the game they both aren't out there playing their hearts out so I'm cool with it.
                    I Bleed Blue

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                    • #40
                      Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                      I remember during the Finals last year, LeBron was all buddy-buddy with KD. There were people who thought LeBron was doing it on purpose to get in KD's head. It seems to me like he was trying the same thing with Paul heading into the Fourth quarter, especially after what happen in the fourth quarter of game 1. A few years ago Paul would have been in "awe" of LeBron and the moment. Not now. Paul is starting to get that killer instinct. Once he completely masters that he will truly be one of the games best players. I'm sure Vogel and Shaw have spent time prepping Paul on Lebrons head games.

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                      • #41
                        Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                        I think this was to get in PG's head. It's like how 45 used to act buddy buddy with guys like Barkley, which was really just a ploy to make them vulnerable so that he could rip their hearts out. Regardless, I'm not going to act like I all of the sudden like The King just because he gave PG a little dap.

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                        • #42
                          Originally posted by Sollozzo View Post
                          I think this was to get in PG's head. It's like how 45 used to act buddy buddy with guys like Barkley, which was really just a ploy to make them vulnerable so that he could rip their hearts out. Regardless, I'm not going to act like I all of the sudden like The King just because he gave PG a little dap.
                          45? Haha....

                          Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
                          There are two types of quarterbacks in the league: Those whom over time, the league figures out ... and those who figure out the league.

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                          • #43
                            Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                            Well, if it was LeBron's attempt to pull a Jordan...it didn't work.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                              Originally posted by PacePoe31 View Post
                              I don't know whats going on in his mind and I don't care(we have a series to worry about) but I'm pretty sure he is more like a Durant if I had to guess. Plus Indiana isn't a bad place to play you can't compare a regular basketball player to that diva Lebron. Lebron was always going to choice the easy way that is who he is and that is why George doesn't fear him.
                              Lebron signed a contract extension in Cleveland...he wanted to win. Cleveland management clearly couldn't give him enough help so he left. Criticize him for how he handled leaving all you want, but I find it hard to fault him for leaving itself.
                              //

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Much respect for LeBron giving PG love

                                Originally posted by Pace Maker View Post
                                Lebron signed a contract extension in Cleveland...he wanted to win. Cleveland management clearly couldn't give him enough help so he left. Criticize him for how he handled leaving all you want, but I find it hard to fault him for leaving itself.
                                Agreed. He gave them seven years for Christ's sake. I would have bolted too.

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