Changing of the guard: Giannis, Ja Morant and others swing spotlight from LeBron
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You see it when Jayson Tatum and Kevin Durant are bantering back and forth on a challenged call, or when Ja Morant lands awkwardly but pops up like a toddler numb to danger.
You see it when Luka Doncic waves to a road crowd after knowing his individual performances are matched by a bona fide team effort to lift Dallas to the second round.
You see it when Giannis Antetokounmpo pulls a Tracy McGrady in a hostile environment, throwing a pass to himself off the backboard.
And unfortunately, you see it when James Harden canโt rev it up like he used to, like an old boxer who looks the part on the outside but canโt dodge a jab in his later years.
The changing of the guard is upon the basketball world, and everyoneโs battling for open real estate โ land that wasnโt available when LeBron James ruled every basketball conversation on the floor and off, when his on-court excellence determined the course of the playoffs.
Itโs not that the NBA couldnโt use James or an extended playoff run from Durant here. Heโs compelling and bankable, and Durant is still very close to, if not at, his peak.
But the game moves on, and has to move forward to evolve. If the league relies solely on James, like it did with Michael Jordan, itโll find itself in a world of trouble when the day comes where Father Time finally taps James on the back to say, โCome on home.โ
Some have been reluctant to acknowledge Antetokounmpoโs occupation atop the mountain, even some in this space, even after watching his journey and ascension to clutch champion last summer.
But thereโs almost no denial now that any โbaddest man aliveโ discussion has to look down Interstate 94 to Wisconsin. And even better, perhaps he has broken the collective addiction to James and the always-present drama that accompanies him. Heโs not positioning himself to be the anti-James or anti-Durant, not falling into the trick bag of painting himself into the corner of staying in one place forever, but the public and basketball world has taken to him in an unexpected way, a way that opens the door for new characters to arrive while honoring and appreciating the ones still taking center stage.
And thatโs not to take away from Stephen Curry trying to create a modified version of Magic Johnsonโs โShowtime,โ winning championships with different teams and different casts but him as the constant.
The trusted figures, even seeing as foils to the new generation, feels soothing as a period of transition is upon us.
And thereโs no turning back.
Jordanโs retirements made it so the public never got tired of him, even if his opponents couldnโt get by him to win those coveted championships โ so the oxygen then was different than what the NBA is facing now.
And whatโs worse, nobody took it from him. It preserves his personal legacy, as evidenced in the Jordan-sanctioned โThe Last Dance,โ but for the story of the game and perhaps even Jordan himself, it wouldโve been better to see the mantle forcibly taken, cleanly and definitively.
The league wandered in the wilderness, unable to properly contextualize the greatness in the decade following Jordanโs retirement, ill-equipped to appreciate the figures of that day.
Hopefully for all involved, they put real energy behind the new crop of stars, with this spring being the perfect opportunity to usher in a new way to look at the game.
Magic and Larry Bird, essentially, took it from Julius Erving. Magic beat Dr. J in two NBA Finals, and Bird and Dr. J engaged in numerous playoff battles. The old heads can remember Bird torching Dr. J to the tune of something like 42-6 one night, and resulted in Erving trying to exact justice with his hands in a way his wrists couldnโt.
Torch passed, and it was damned violent.
And by that point, Bird was already a two-time champion, a made man. So it wasnโt about a title, it was about establishing a new world order that all competitors must acknowledge and recognize.
It might hurt to see an all-time great at less than their best, during a moment where their minds are saying, โIf I were a younger man โฆ,โ but it validates the next generation. Or at least it should.
Harden wasnโt a standard-bearer in a traditional sense, but his stats put him in a certain place in history. Even though this is the age of players staying at a high level for longer stretches of time than in any era, heโs in full decline and he might be the only one who doesnโt realize it.
We see it, and while itโs not the most pleasing sight, itโs required. Years of games, minutes and (allegedly) other activities have taken a toll, and the youngsters are here to take the corners.
Itโs why Morant and Doncic are so aggressive, so audacious and so refreshing to watch. Itโs not that theyโve developed a new identity in the wake of the usual suspectsโ absence โ this is who theyโve been in their respective cities.
Morant doing the Griddy isnโt new to the diehards, nor is Doncic limping around before popping up like James Brown with the cape on. But itโs being introduced to the casual fan who now is giving the NBA their full attention. Clearly, the results are positive.
Tatum has been around longer, even if the โheโs only 19โ jokes have gotten old. Heโs a full, grown man, no longer someone we imagine what heโll be like once he matures. Tatum already had Durantโs respect before Bostonโs sweep of Brooklyn, but doing it in front of the world gave him another layer of being certified
โI told Jayson when he was in high school, he gonna sell shoes, he gonna be an All-Star,โ Durant told Yahoo Sports last week. โSo for him to do this? I expect him to do this; itโs no surprise to me. I expect him to be a Hall of Famer, 30,000 points, three-time Olympian. I expect that out of him because thatโs how talented he is. Thatโs how great he is.โ
It seems easy to say that with no James or Durant, the league would find someone, anyone to push. But weโve seen an inordinate amount of ink spilled and words stated on irrelevant teams and figures, almost as if we were willing them to be better out of fear. However, it was mostly out of habit, and plenty of attention would be focused on Jamesโ Instagram posts and tweets if the basketball wasnโt up to snuff.
Luckily it is, and even if the likes of the establishment return for their turn and are met with a rude awakening, it makes for a better story.
And isnโt that what the NBA wants?