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duncan228
06-25-2009, 01:14 PM
LeBron needs Shaq’s fury for ride to Finals (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=aw-shaqlebron062509&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
By Adrian Wojnarowski

Perhaps nothing inspires Shaquille O’Neal as does the prospect of vengeance and vindication. Yes, LeBron James’ best chance to be an NBA champion is born of that relentless rage. The Cleveland Cavaliers have laid it all out for Shaq: Go through Dwight Howard and Stan Van Gundy, and get us to Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson. Here comes Shaq to the Cavaliers, and in his mind, here comes hell to pay for slights real and imagined.

Shaq is the gift that never stops giving for David Stern and the NBA. He’s 37 years old and past his prime, and yet there are no major moments on the NBA calendar when he isn’t still the biggest story of all. Yes, the Rent-a-Shaq tour hits Cleveland now and the commissioner is the most relieved man of all. His dream Finals – L.A. and Cleveland – could be the most anticipated in the NBA’s history.

Now, Shaq is salvation from the tedium of a lousy draft. He was the salvation in the Finals between his old teammates and coaches. He was the salvation of a lost All-Star weekend in Phoenix, where he did the dance of the Jabberwocky and raised a co-MVP trophy with Kobe. He is like the aging prom queen forever finding a younger beau for his arm: From Kobe to Dwyane Wade to LeBron now.

As Yahoo! Sports first reported, the trade came down in the late hours of Wednesday, when Cleveland GM Danny Ferry finally realized he couldn’t pry Vince Carter out of New Jersey for his expiring contracts and junk players. The Cavs didn’t do this trade without some reservation. “They aren’t sure how he’s going to roll with being LeBron’s sidekick,” says an executive source close to the Cavaliers’ front office. Yet, the Cavaliers made this trade without apology:

Whatever LeBron wants, LeBron gets.

Once LeBron told management he wanted to see Shaq on his side, well, what choice did they have?

“Great name, great presence – not nearly enough game left,” one Western Conference GM warned on Wednesday night.

Ferry had no choice. He has to pray the immensity of Shaq’s stature doesn’t grind with James. O’Neal did have a fabulous season at his advanced NBA age, but he was desperate to become relevant again come playoff time. When he’s been out of the playoffs these past two springs, Shaq has repeatedly popped off with rap, with Tweets, with half-joking malice.

For Shaq, the Suns were a chance to restore his value in the NBA, his standing as something more than a bitter, aging relic. He never did fit in Phoenix. His revival infringed on the freedom of Amare Stoudemire and Steve Nash. As one Eastern Conference coach told me this week, “At Shaq’s age, it’s still too much getting his touches.”

How Shaq fits with the Cavaliers, with LeBron, is ever the intrigue. LeBron has never had to play with a persona, an ego. Forget his time with Team USA. It isn’t the same. LeBron doesn’t need to dominate the ball the way Kobe did, but he does need to dominate the conversation. Nevertheless, he’s probably watched enough of Zydrunas Ilgauskas getting thrown around by Howard in the conference finals to understand he’ll have to sacrifice some ego with Shaq, some face time.

The Rent-A-Shaq tour comes to Cleveland without much of a price paid. Perhaps the most dominant center in the NBA’s history came for two contracts the Suns might buy out, a second pick and $500,000. As one prominent agent said Wednesday. “Don’t blame Steve Kerr for this. That owner [Robert Sarver] will do anything to save a buck right now.” The Suns could save millions on the deal, but they don’t save face.

League executives were surprised Ferry closed the deal without having to give up the Cavaliers’ first-round choice in the draft. “I thought for sure Danny was resigned to giving them the 30th pick,” one rival GM said. “I’m surprised the Suns didn’t hold out a little longer.”

In the end, this trade was inevitable. The Cavaliers make the boldest move of the offseason, a deal they wanted to believe was unnecessary back at the trade deadline in February. The Cavaliers had the best record in basketball, the best defense and it turned out to be fool’s good. The Magic embarrassed them in the Eastern Conference finals, and LeBron James stomped into the summer without a handshake, without so much as a word of congratulations to Dwight Howard.

Now, LeBron goes and gets the biggest bully of all, Shaquille O’Neal, and brings him back to the gym for next season. The greatest storyline in the sport returns to relevance, with Shaquille O’Neal back in the chase for his fifth championship. Dwight and Stan, Kobe and Phil are waiting in the distance now, and Shaq is desperate to have the final word for them all.

The hate fuels his fury, inspires his journey and the Cavaliers need to stoke it all within Shaq. Here Shaq comes to Cleveland, here comes hell to pay.

ElNono
06-25-2009, 01:15 PM
replace 'fury' with 'coattails'... We'll see if the big Aristotle has anything left in the tank...

Gino
06-25-2009, 01:19 PM
Um...Lebron has already led a team to the finals without Shaq.

Allanon
06-25-2009, 01:20 PM
I wonder how those headlines make LeBron feel.

LeBron can't win without Shaq? :lol

duncan228
06-25-2009, 01:49 PM
The national view.

Blockbuster: Cavs acquire Shaq from Suns (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-shaqtraded&prov=ap&type=lgns)
By Tom Withers

LeBron and Shaq: Two of the NBA’s biggest stars are now teammates.

The Cleveland Cavaliers completed a blockbuster trade Thursday, bringing superstar center Shaquille O’Neal from the Phoenix Suns to join current MVP LeBron James.

The Cavaliers hope they are creating a basketball duo with the drawing power of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar—or even Shaq and Kobe Bryant.

Each of those pairs won multiple NBA titles. The Cavs would settle for their first.

The Cavs are sending center Ben Wallace and swingman Sasha Pavlovic to the Suns, along with a second-round pick in the 2010 draft and $500,000 in cash, one of the people close to the deal said.

O’Neal has won four championships during his 17-year career—three as member of the Los Angeles Lakers with Bryant and one in Miami with Dwyane Wade — and will now try to get yet another with James, the league’s reigning MVP, who is only missing a title ring from his personal resume.

The trade is a gamble for the Cavs. They are hoping that the 37-year-old O’Neal, who is past his prime and has one year and $21 million left on his contract, can be the missing piece that helps James deliver his first championship to a city that has waited since 1964 for one of its major sports teams to win it all.

For sheer star power, the O’Neal-James tandem rivals any on the sports landscape today. And if it works, and lasts, the pairing may one day belong in the same company as some of the all-time combinations like Maris-Mantle, Koufax-Drysdale or Montana-Rice. But it could also be a one-year gambit.

Cavaliers general manager Danny Ferry and Suns GM Steve Kerr have been discussing the deal for months and finally reached a preliminary agreement early Thursday morning. The teams had to get league approval before the swap could be announced. They made the trade official in the afternoon.

James could have used Shaq during this year’s playoffs. The Cavaliers’ frontcourt of Wallace, Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Anderson Varejao couldn’t contain Orlando center Dwight Howard, and Cleveland and lost in the Eastern Conference finals—a devastating blow for a team that won 66 games in the regular season and coasted through the first two rounds without losing a game.

O’Neal is coming off an All-Star season with the Suns—averaging 17.8 points and 8.4 rebounds in 75 games—but doesn’t move as well as he once did and slowed Phoenix’s high-powered offense. Still, the 7-foot-1, 325-pounder is large enough to take on a player like Howard by himself.

The Cavaliers’ urgency to win a title is greater than ever with James entering his final season before he can opt out of his contract. The 24-year-old came up short this season and stormed off the floor following Game 6 in Orlando without shaking hands with any of the Magic players, including Howard, his U.S. Olympic teammate.

Cleveland can offer James an extension this summer, but there’s no guarantee the Akron native, who has always maintained he wants to stay in his home state, will sign it.

Bringing in O’Neal may soothe James’ concerns that the Cavs wouldn’t be able to get him enough help to make a run at numerous titles. Ferry still wants to re-sign Varejao this summer and may look to add another perimeter player through a trade or free agency.

The trade gives the Suns financial flexibility in the future. All told, they will save $10 million.

The 34-year-old Wallace, who after the season said he may retire, is in the final year of a $14 million deal and the Suns plan to buy out Pavlovic, who has $1.5 million of his $4.95 million contract guaranteed.

Phoenix owner Robert Sarver, whose banking and real estate interests have suffered greatly in the economic downturn, said earlier this month he didn’t mind paying a luxury tax for a good team. But Phoenix failed to make the playoffs, and the Suns are in the midst of what amounts to a rebuilding effort and now will be under the luxury tax threshold.

The Suns won one playoff game in O’Neal’s season and a half, and this spring they failed to qualify for the postseason for the first time since 2004. Soon after the season ended, speculation began to grow that the club was looking to deal O’Neal while his trade value was still high.

The Suns might not be finished with big trades. All-Star Amare Stoudemire, who can opt out of his contract, also is being mentioned prominently in potential deals.