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NBA
| LeBron, Shaq finally together as Cavs start training camp
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LeBron |
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O'neil |
The
lights went out, the courts darkened and a media day already like
no other in Cavaliers history was canceled after just two hours.
Maybe with LeBron James and Shaquille O'Neal, Cleveland has too
much superstar power. The
duo's first public appearance together as teammates was cut short
Monday when the electricity went out at the Cavs' fabulous suburban
training facility, forcing the team to improvise for O'Neal's interview
and re-schedule the event for a later date. While
it might seem the high-profile James-O'Neal pairing could seemingly
overload any circuit, high winds were blamed for the outage. Even
before the building dimmed at 3:41 p.m., it was already evident
that James and O'Neal are the NBA's newest marquee act.
More
than 150 media members swarmed on Cleveland Clinic Courts for their
first chance to talk to the larger-than-life All-Stars, whose road
trips with the Cavs this season may be more look more like one of
U2's world tours than, say, back-to-back games in Detroit and Indianapolis.
Look out, here they come. "Day One of the madness," Cavaliers
guard Mo Williams said, surveying the horde of cameras, microphones
and reporters.
The
Cavs acquired O'Neal in June, shortly after they were eliminated
in the Eastern Conference semifinals by the Orlando Magic. Cleveland,
which won 66 regular-season games and 10 in the playoffs and still
came up short of a title, had tried to land the big man from Phoenix
before the All-Star break but general manager Danny Ferry wasn't
able to complete a deal until after the season. O'Neal
may not the dominant force he once was, but the 37-year-old can
still draw two defenders and strike fear into the heart of any opponent
simply by being Shaq. Upon
his arrival in Cleveland, O'Neal said his goal this season was to
"win a ring for the King," a reference to his new teammate's
King James nickname, while O'Neal wants to win his fifth. "I
have four under my belt and it would be nice to get five,"
O'Neal said, standing in the middle of the Cavs' weight room. "But
I just want to come play and just have my name left somewhere in
history. And it will be -- win or lose. There's nobody like me.
You know that."
While
O'Neal has played with and won championships with Kobe Bryant in
Los Angeles and Dwyane Wade in Miami, James has never had a teammate
of O'Neal's stature or talent. After O'Neal joined the Cavaliers,
speculation quickly mounted that the marriage might not work, that
jealousies may get in the way of championships. O'Neal made it clear
that the Cavaliers are James' team and that he has no intention
of threatening the league MVP's domain. He said he learned from
his time with Bryant and Wade and those experiences will help him
as a teammate with James. At this stage of his career, O'Neal has
no problem being a co-star. "It's all about winning,"
he said. "Nothing else really matters. At those times in my
career I was a different player. Kobe said it the best, we had two
Alpha males on the same team. I never really looked at it like that.
Of course, when I was with D-Wade I was a little older. "Now
I am a lot older so it's going to be different. LeBron has always
been a team player. He has always made the guys around him better,
so we don't need to have any conversation at all. We just come and
play. We know it's his team and he's going to have the ball the
most. It's our job to help him get there. "It's
his team."
James
and O'Neal aren't close friends, but they share a mutual respect
for each other and the game. Some
wondered how their chemistry would be off the floor, and Williams
said if Monday was any indication, the Cavaliers are in for quite
a ride. James
and O'Neal were already clowning around in the locker room, with
7-foot-1, 325-pound O'Neal running around and complaining that his
uniform was too small. "My
shorts are kind of Brad Daugherty-ish," O'Neal said with a
nod to the former Cavs center who played in the pre baggy-shorts
era. "It's going to be fun. Guys are very loose but they go
out and take care of business. From my experience, the looser the
teams that I've been on, we usually can get it done."James
said he has no problem sharing the spotlight with O'Neal. He was
asked if he consulted with Bryant and Wade -- his U.S. Olympic teammates
-- about what was like to play with O'Neal. "No,
I haven't," he said. "It's a teammate. It's not like I
adopted a kid or something. I'm looking forward to it. It's going
to be great. ... I've dreamed about playing with some of all the
greats. To have him a part of this franchise, to have him be a part
of my team is going to be great."
Williams
already has seen the possibilities of James and O'Neal on the floor.
The two began working out with their teammates last week. "Shaq
called for a lob and it was up by the (backboard) square and he
went up and got it," Williams said. "And that's Shaq,
a 30-year veteran doing that. ... Don't tell him I said that."
Williams
also scoffed at the idea there might be problems between the icons.
"No way," he said. "You seen 'Bron play basketball?
Shaq will get five easy dunks a game -- easy." James and O'Neal
did not get a chance to interact in front of the media. James' interview
session took place before the power outage and he was sitting with
Williams, Delonte West and a few other teammates when he was told
the hours of posing for photos and interviews might be postponed.
"Media
day's over," James hollered as he ran down a hallway. But in
Cleveland, the fun has just begun.
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