Them Nikkas Had a Parade!!!.Official Season Thread Of The World Champion Miami Heat

Alexander The Great

I ain't gonna say this sh*t again
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I know the Heat have become a half court offensive team, but they need to try and run as much as possible vs the Bulls. Hopefully Battier and Chalmers are back on this round
 

Brief Keef

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MIAMI -- Miami Heat practice had ended, and LeBron James lingered under a basket, fetching free throws for two teammates as he awaited his turn to shoot.

At the other end of the gym, Dwyane Wade shook his head as he watched the NBA's most valuable player engage in the most mundane of drills.

"He doesn't -- you can see him -- rest on his greatness," Wade said. "He continues to work at it. That's what makes him special. He leaves nothing to chance."

“
I don't know my ceiling. I don't stop trying to improve my game -- just like today, being in here with Rio and Ray, the last guys to leave the court. I want to continue to maximize what I have.
”
-- LeBron James
The formal announcement of James' fourth Most Valuable Player award is planned for Sunday, the eve of the Eastern Conference semifinals for the Heat. The honor will vault him into an elite category shared by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan, Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain, the only other players to win the award at least four times.

James said he was humbled to keep such company.

"I'm a historian of the game," he said. "I know the game. I know these guys paved the way for myself and the rest of us."

James' other MVPs came in 2009, 2010 and 2012. He and Russell are the only players to win the award four times in five years, and he and Abdul-Jabbar are the only players to twice win the award in consecutive seasons.

James, 28, isn't resting on his laurels. That's why he kept shooting with teammates Ray Allen and Mario Chalmers after practice Saturday, while the other Heat players had headed for the showers.

"I don't know my ceiling," James said. "I don't stop trying to improve my game -- just like today, being in here with Rio and Ray, the last guys to leave the court. I want to continue to maximize what I have."

James said his primary goal remains helping the Heat win a second successive NBA title. They're scheduled to open their conference semifinals series at home Monday against the winner of the series between Chicago and Brooklyn, which went to Game 7 on Saturday night.

The Heat have been idle since Sunday, when they completed a series sweep of Milwaukee. The most scrutinized subject during the layoff has been Wade's sore right knee, and while he expects to play in Game 1, he said he'll likely have to cope with discomfort for the rest of the playoffs.

"I told the coaches, 'Don't ask me how I'm doing,'" Wade said to a cluster of reporters. "The mind is a powerful thing. Everything is mind over matter. So when you're dealing with something, you're dealing it. You understand what it is.

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"But when people continue to pat you on the back and ask you if you're doing all right and how you are feeling, you start to feel like, 'Well, something is wrong with me.'"

Wade smiled at the media scrum.

"So I would like for you all not to ask me anymore. Thank you."

Injuries to Wade and other stars around the league this postseason stand in contrast to James' durability, one of his most remarkable traits. In a 10-year career, he never has missed more than seven games in a season, suggesting he's likely to remain a force -- and an MVP contender -- for years to come.

Jordan was 35 the last time he was chosen MVP, in 1998. Abdul-Jabbar won for the final time at 33, Chamberlain and Russell at 31.

"Who wouldn't love to continue to play at an NBA level in the mid-30s?" James said. "We all would want that. Health is always the No. 1 thing."

A healthy James keeps improving, and the consensus among the Heat and their opponents is that this season was his best yet. He averaged 26.8 points, 8.0 rebounds and 7.3 assists while shooting a career-best 56 percent for a team that won a league-high 66 games, including 27 in a row.

That's after leading Miami to the 2011-12 NBA championship and then helping the U.S. win a gold medal at the London Olympics.

"We tell our organization and our fans, 'Don't take this for granted,'" coach Erik Spoelstra said. "He's a once-in-a-generation player, and you knew it when he came into the league. There are No. 1 draft picks, and then there are No. 1 generational draft picks that are heads and shoulders above everybody else. They don't come around very often."

While James pledges to be even better in 2013-14, teammates wonder what part his game can improve.

"I don't know," Udonis Haslem said. "I'm running out of stuff, man."

"Maybe next year he'll shoot 70 percent," Chris Bosh said.

In search of his ceiling, James hung around after practice Saturday, shooting extra free throws.

"He's on the verge of winning four MVPs in five years, and he'll be the last one to leave the gym today," Wade said. "He understands the gift God gave him. He understands that not many have it and it doesn't last for too long, and he wants to make sure he maximizes all of it."

:laff: this nikka wade stay bullshyttin
 

Primetime21

This my city
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Lemongrass, cherries, alkaline water
LeBatard with that ether

No royal proclamation necessary for Miami Heat’s LeBron James


It is funny, looking back now. Wasn’t that long ago that a tough, humble basketball player became an enormous fan favorite at least in part because he allegedly represented everything James didn’t. No shortcuts for him. No ego. No nonsense. The media even gave that popular player an MVP trophy that should have instead gone to the disgraced James, one of the few ever awarded to one man out of spite for another. This fan favorite, of course, was Derrick Rose, who has since found that goodwill to be fleeting in the face of losing and injury and shooting 6 percent in the fourth quarter of a playoff series when James happened to be guarding him.

This proves that popularity is never as enduring as greatness. Neither is health, for that matter. But it also reveals that history can always be viewed more clearly with the perspective of tomorrow than with the emotion of today. James made the right Decision. That has never been more obvious than it is now. Proof of that is not merely in one championship or a second MVP trophy in Miami but in the mouth of Derrick Rose’s own brother Reggie, who looks out into the future and complains that the Bulls must get his sibling more help. Reggie would not feel this way if not for the obstructed view of the championship James has created by planting himself right in front of that family Rose garden.


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/05/05/3380999/dan-le-batard-no-royal-proclamation.html#storylink=cpy
 
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Lookin back at that year..even Dwight c00n, who's team won just 52 games, had more votes than Bron.

The hatred was disgusting :beli:
 

madness

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they really despised that nikka in 2010. i don't think i've ever seen an athlete in my lifetime get the venom he got year 1 in miami, even kobe got less hate during his rape trial.

remember all the heavy boos he got in every road game, even in random ass places like minnesota and salt lake city?:dead: only arena that had a legit reason to boo him was the Q in cleveland. media really had NBA fans brainwashed that season


but they've all repented for their sins:blessed:
 

King Jove

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mvp.gif


:mj:
 
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