LeBron Haters Call To Arms! (The Haters Unification Thread)

I don't remember ever seeing a player not only snitch but work with his media mouth pieces to snitch to the NBA. Biggest B in history.
 
I hope Dubs win tomorrow without Draymond

Would expose how much of LeFraud is a fraud to the casuals
 
Man, I was ready to retire my hate for Bron after the dubs won this championship. After pulling this ***** made move of ratting to the NBA about draymond, I'll hate this man forever. Straight snitching to get his way is so foul. Hope cavs lose by 50 tomorrow without draymond on the court. Then after all the celebration, I hope draymond or someone from the Warriors drops some ether quote about Bron, his girl, or Cleveland in general. **** Bron Bron, **** Bron Bron
For real! It revitalized my hate for him! That's such a BAN move by a BAN! :smh:
 
Talking bout taking the high road? ***** u, Dwight and Blake have no choice but to ignore ****. The all nba soft team.
 
At the end of the day it wont matter, Lebron is the most overrated player of all time.  How are people going to call him one of the greatest ever when the dude doesn't have a jumper or post move.  **** lebron's and his front running ********.
 
Talking bout taking the high road? ***** u, Dwight and Blake have no choice but to ignore ****. The all nba soft team.
I mean whY does high road mean? I don't even get the ******* meaning.

I heard of my way or highway but not high road ... **** Bron Bron
 
[h1]The Myth and Reality of LeBron James[/h1]
Draymond Green has never believed in the myth of LeBron James.  In December 2012, Green was an unheralded second-round draft-pick, fighting for time in his rookie year.  James was the centerpiece of supposedly the greatest team ever assembled.  The Warriors arrived in Miami in the midst of a successful road trip and went to war against the Heat.  In an effort to slow down a typically dominant performance from James, Mark Jackson gave Green a shot at defending him.  Green denied James on two consecutive trips to the basket.  The third time down, James finally drew a foul on the rookie.  James then turned and barked at Green.  “You too little.”  At that moment, Warriors fans — and the rest of the NBA — learned something important about Green.  He didn’t shy away from the then-best-player-in-the-world.  He didn’t worry about the perceived ridiculousness of some then-nobody jawing at an NBA great.  He turned around, got in LeBron’s face, and answered.  Later that night, Green scored a slashing lay-up with 0.9 seconds left to defeat LeBron and the Heat on their home court, 97-95.  It would be the first time Green bested James.  It wouldn’t be the last.

The Cavs may win Game 5 against a Green-less Warriors, but LeBron James has lost something bigger in the process.  In the fourth quarter of Game 4, James transparently baited Green with a step-over after Green and the Warriors’ defense had owned James on the defensive end all quarter.  The step-over is usually an act reserved for a victor over the dominated — think Allen Iverson over Tyronn Lue.  But James deployed it as a tantrum.  It was the hollow act of someone lashing out in defeat, not boasting in victory.  James then spent his post-game press conference passively-aggressively lobbying for a suspension, pushing the NBA to do what he could not do himself: get past Draymond Green.

The victim narrative is a new look for LeBron, and not one that sits well with his “Greatest” self-mythologizing.  According to James, “some of the words that came out of [Green’s] mouth were a little overboard.”  James immediately characterized the play as one “the League will take a look at.”  James then descended into talk about how “the chips have been stacked up against us all year.”  James and the Cavs apparently haven’t just overcome a historically weak Eastern Conference, a roster assembled specifically to meet James’ demands and a coach chosen with James’ blessing, but also intolerable bias from the referees.  “I’m not quite sure what I can do personally to get to the free-throw line,” James mused.  “I’m getting hit, but the refs are not seeing it that way, on my drives.”  If that wasn’t direct enough: “it’s tough playing 46 minutes and only going to the line four times, as much as I attack the rim.”  But asked a few questions later about his criticism of the refs, James was in full denial: “I didn’t talk about the referees.  I was asked a question and I answered it.  I’m going to save my 25K, okay.  So I have not talked about the referees.  Don’t put me in that cloud.”  The myth of LeBron James floats on a different cloud.  One where “the King” doesn’t need to whine for calls, doesn’t let an opponent’s trash talk rattle him, and doesn’t need NBA intervention to help him reach what he has always viewed as his entitlement: an NBA championship.  But back on earth, in the reality of 2016, the myth of LeBron James is increasingly hard to believe.

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There will be endless debate about how a play where Green barely makes contact with James can be a flagrant foul (James certainly didn’t respond as if Green made serious contact, and the ref immediately in front of the play didn’t call it).  Others will try to cobble together some theory of intent intent based on plays scattered throughout the playoffs and Green’s career (none of which appear indisputably intentional), while ignoring more egregious acts by members of the Cavs that were dismissed as “scrappy basketball plays” and never reviewed for punishment.  There will be talk of double standards, but the arbitrariness of the NBA’s ruling makes any reference to a “standard” generous.  These debates may suck up all the media bandwidth until Monday night’s game, but ultimately, Draymond Green’s suspension will be an asterisk on this series.  James and the Cavs may have successfully lobbied to change the match-ups in Game 5, but all their hurt feelings can’t change the fundamental differences between these teams: in talent, in coaching, and in the way the players work together as a true team.

A year after bemoaning the fact that the Warriors didn’t face the Cavs at full strength, I expect the Warriors to repay those slights with interest by beating the Cavs on Monday despite being a man down.  Green has spent every second of this season watching the backs of his teammates.  In Game 5, they’ll return the loyalty.  It’s hard to imagine any greater motivation for a team that burns disrespect like rocket fuel than what’s transpired over the past 48 hours.  But while I expect the Warriors’ response to this unfortunate incident to only increase their legend, the same can’t be said for James.  Through all of James’ self-laudatory cliches about leadership, competition and rising to the challenge, remember this: when the time came for James and Green to match-up on the biggest stage, it was LeBron who was too little.
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2016/06/12/myth-reality-lebron-james/
 
[h1]The Myth and Reality of LeBron James[/h1]

Draymond Green has never believed in the myth of LeBron James.  In December 2012, Green was an unheralded second-round draft-pick, fighting for time in his rookie year.  James was the centerpiece of supposedly the greatest team ever assembled.  The Warriors arrived in Miami in the midst of a successful road trip and went to war against the Heat.  In an effort to slow down a typically dominant performance from James, Mark Jackson gave Green a shot at defending him.  Green denied James on two consecutive trips to the basket.  The third time down, James finally drew a foul on the rookie.  James then turned and barked at Green.  “You too little.”  At that moment, Warriors fans — and the rest of the NBA — learned something important about Green.  He didn’t shy away from the then-best-player-in-the-world.  He didn’t worry about the perceived ridiculousness of some then-nobody jawing at an NBA great.  He turned around, got in LeBron’s face, and answered.  Later that night, Green scored a slashing lay-up with 0.9 seconds left to defeat LeBron and the Heat on their home court, 97-95.  It would be the first time Green bested James.  It wouldn’t be the last.

The Cavs may win Game 5 against a Green-less Warriors, but LeBron James has lost something bigger in the process.  In the fourth quarter of Game 4, James transparently baited Green with a step-over after Green and the Warriors’ defense had owned James on the defensive end all quarter.  The step-over is usually an act reserved for a victor over the dominated — think Allen Iverson over Tyronn Lue.  But James deployed it as a tantrum.  It was the hollow act of someone lashing out in defeat, not boasting in victory.  James then spent his post-game press conference passively-aggressively lobbying for a suspension, pushing the NBA to do what he could not do himself: get past Draymond Green.
The victim narrative is a new look for LeBron, and not one that sits well with his “Greatest” self-mythologizing.  According to James, “some of the words that came out of [Green’s] mouth were a little overboard.”  James immediately characterized the play as one “the League will take a look at.”  James then descended into talk about how “the chips have been stacked up against us all year.”  James and the Cavs apparently haven’t just overcome a historically weak Eastern Conference, a roster assembled specifically to meet James’ demands and a coach chosen with James’ blessing, but also intolerable bias from the referees.  “I’m not quite sure what I can do personally to get to the free-throw line,” James mused.  “I’m getting hit, but the refs are not seeing it that way, on my drives.”  If that wasn’t direct enough: “it’s tough playing 46 minutes and only going to the line four times, as much as I attack the rim.”  But asked a few questions later about his criticism of the refs, James was in full denial: “I didn’t talk about the referees.  I was asked a question and I answered it.  I’m going to save my 25K, okay.  So I have not talked about the referees.  Don’t put me in that cloud.”  The myth of LeBron James floats on a different cloud.  One where “the King” doesn’t need to whine for calls, doesn’t let an opponent’s trash talk rattle him, and doesn’t need NBA intervention to help him reach what he has always viewed as his entitlement: an NBA championship.  But back on earth, in the reality of 2016, the myth of LeBron James is increasingly hard to believe.

Advertisement


There will be endless debate about how a play where Green barely makes contact with James can be a flagrant foul (James certainly didn’t respond as if Green made serious contact, and the ref immediately in front of the play didn’t call it).  Others will try to cobble together some theory of intent intent based on plays scattered throughout the playoffs and Green’s career (none of which appear indisputably intentional), while ignoring more egregious acts by members of the Cavs that were dismissed as “scrappy basketball plays” and never reviewed for punishment.  There will be talk of double standards, but the arbitrariness of the NBA’s ruling makes any reference to a “standard” generous.  These debates may suck up all the media bandwidth until Monday night’s game, but ultimately, Draymond Green’s suspension will be an asterisk on this series.  James and the Cavs may have successfully lobbied to change the match-ups in Game 5, but all their hurt feelings can’t change the fundamental differences between these teams: in talent, in coaching, and in the way the players work together as a true team.
A year after bemoaning the fact that the Warriors didn’t face the Cavs at full strength, I expect the Warriors to repay those slights with interest by beating the Cavs on Monday despite being a man down.  Green has spent every second of this season watching the backs of his teammates.  In Game 5, they’ll return the loyalty.  It’s hard to imagine any greater motivation for a team that burns disrespect like rocket fuel than what’s transpired over the past 48 hours.  But while I expect the Warriors’ response to this unfortunate incident to only increase their legend, the same can’t be said for James.  Through all of James’ self-laudatory cliches about leadership, competition and rising to the challenge, remember this: when the time came for James and Green to match-up on the biggest stage, it was LeBron who was too little.

http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2016/06/12/myth-reality-lebron-james/
pretty much on point.

I'm not a GSW fan, but I have liked for a while now. Its one of those team (like spurs) that play as a team and are not all [emoji]128152[/emoji] dubby with the rival team.

I like them much more when they stand in front of James and 1 don't take his shot 2 push back 3 shame peseant James in the court with their play
 
[h1]The Myth and Reality of LeBron James[/h1]

Draymond Green has never believed in the myth of LeBron James.  In December 2012, Green was an unheralded second-round draft-pick, fighting for time in his rookie year.  James was the centerpiece of supposedly the greatest team ever assembled.  The Warriors arrived in Miami in the midst of a successful road trip and went to war against the Heat.  In an effort to slow down a typically dominant performance from James, Mark Jackson gave Green a shot at defending him.  Green denied James on two consecutive trips to the basket.  The third time down, James finally drew a foul on the rookie.  James then turned and barked at Green.  “You too little.”  At that moment, Warriors fans — and the rest of the NBA — learned something important about Green.  He didn’t shy away from the then-best-player-in-the-world.  He didn’t worry about the perceived ridiculousness of some then-nobody jawing at an NBA great.  He turned around, got in LeBron’s face, and answered.  Later that night, Green scored a slashing lay-up with 0.9 seconds left to defeat LeBron and the Heat on their home court, 97-95.  It would be the first time Green bested James.  It wouldn’t be the last.

The Cavs may win Game 5 against a Green-less Warriors, but LeBron James has lost something bigger in the process.  In the fourth quarter of Game 4, James transparently baited Green with a step-over after Green and the Warriors’ defense had owned James on the defensive end all quarter.  The step-over is usually an act reserved for a victor over the dominated — think Allen Iverson over Tyronn Lue.  But James deployed it as a tantrum.  It was the hollow act of someone lashing out in defeat, not boasting in victory.  James then spent his post-game press conference passively-aggressively lobbying for a suspension, pushing the NBA to do what he could not do himself: get past Draymond Green.
The victim narrative is a new look for LeBron, and not one that sits well with his “Greatest” self-mythologizing.  According to James, “some of the words that came out of [Green’s] mouth were a little overboard.”  James immediately characterized the play as one “the League will take a look at.”  James then descended into talk about how “the chips have been stacked up against us all year.”  James and the Cavs apparently haven’t just overcome a historically weak Eastern Conference, a roster assembled specifically to meet James’ demands and a coach chosen with James’ blessing, but also intolerable bias from the referees.  “I’m not quite sure what I can do personally to get to the free-throw line,” James mused.  “I’m getting hit, but the refs are not seeing it that way, on my drives.”  If that wasn’t direct enough: “it’s tough playing 46 minutes and only going to the line four times, as much as I attack the rim.”  But asked a few questions later about his criticism of the refs, James was in full denial: “I didn’t talk about the referees.  I was asked a question and I answered it.  I’m going to save my 25K, okay.  So I have not talked about the referees.  Don’t put me in that cloud.”  The myth of LeBron James floats on a different cloud.  One where “the King” doesn’t need to whine for calls, doesn’t let an opponent’s trash talk rattle him, and doesn’t need NBA intervention to help him reach what he has always viewed as his entitlement: an NBA championship.  But back on earth, in the reality of 2016, the myth of LeBron James is increasingly hard to believe.

Advertisement


There will be endless debate about how a play where Green barely makes contact with James can be a flagrant foul (James certainly didn’t respond as if Green made serious contact, and the ref immediately in front of the play didn’t call it).  Others will try to cobble together some theory of intent intent based on plays scattered throughout the playoffs and Green’s career (none of which appear indisputably intentional), while ignoring more egregious acts by members of the Cavs that were dismissed as “scrappy basketball plays” and never reviewed for punishment.  There will be talk of double standards, but the arbitrariness of the NBA’s ruling makes any reference to a “standard” generous.  These debates may suck up all the media bandwidth until Monday night’s game, but ultimately, Draymond Green’s suspension will be an asterisk on this series.  James and the Cavs may have successfully lobbied to change the match-ups in Game 5, but all their hurt feelings can’t change the fundamental differences between these teams: in talent, in coaching, and in the way the players work together as a true team.
A year after bemoaning the fact that the Warriors didn’t face the Cavs at full strength, I expect the Warriors to repay those slights with interest by beating the Cavs on Monday despite being a man down.  Green has spent every second of this season watching the backs of his teammates.  In Game 5, they’ll return the loyalty.  It’s hard to imagine any greater motivation for a team that burns disrespect like rocket fuel than what’s transpired over the past 48 hours.  But while I expect the Warriors’ response to this unfortunate incident to only increase their legend, the same can’t be said for James.  Through all of James’ self-laudatory cliches about leadership, competition and rising to the challenge, remember this: when the time came for James and Green to match-up on the biggest stage, it was LeBron who was too little.

http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2016/06/12/myth-reality-lebron-james/

Well written and truthful article based on the facts. NBA don't want to hear this noise.
 
[h1]The Myth and Reality of LeBron James[/h1]

Draymond Green has never believed in the myth of LeBron James.  In December 2012, Green was an unheralded second-round draft-pick, fighting for time in his rookie year.  James was the centerpiece of supposedly the greatest team ever assembled.  The Warriors arrived in Miami in the midst of a successful road trip and went to war against the Heat.  In an effort to slow down a typically dominant performance from James, Mark Jackson gave Green a shot at defending him.  Green denied James on two consecutive trips to the basket.  The third time down, James finally drew a foul on the rookie.  James then turned and barked at Green.  “You too little.”  At that moment, Warriors fans — and the rest of the NBA — learned something important about Green.  He didn’t shy away from the then-best-player-in-the-world.  He didn’t worry about the perceived ridiculousness of some then-nobody jawing at an NBA great.  He turned around, got in LeBron’s face, and answered.  Later that night, Green scored a slashing lay-up with 0.9 seconds left to defeat LeBron and the Heat on their home court, 97-95.  It would be the first time Green bested James.  It wouldn’t be the last.

The Cavs may win Game 5 against a Green-less Warriors, but LeBron James has lost something bigger in the process.  In the fourth quarter of Game 4, James transparently baited Green with a step-over after Green and the Warriors’ defense had owned James on the defensive end all quarter.  The step-over is usually an act reserved for a victor over the dominated — think Allen Iverson over Tyronn Lue.  But James deployed it as a tantrum.  It was the hollow act of someone lashing out in defeat, not boasting in victory.  James then spent his post-game press conference passively-aggressively lobbying for a suspension, pushing the NBA to do what he could not do himself: get past Draymond Green.
The victim narrative is a new look for LeBron, and not one that sits well with his “Greatest” self-mythologizing.  According to James, “some of the words that came out of [Green’s] mouth were a little overboard.”  James immediately characterized the play as one “the League will take a look at.”  James then descended into talk about how “the chips have been stacked up against us all year.”  James and the Cavs apparently haven’t just overcome a historically weak Eastern Conference, a roster assembled specifically to meet James’ demands and a coach chosen with James’ blessing, but also intolerable bias from the referees.  “I’m not quite sure what I can do personally to get to the free-throw line,” James mused.  “I’m getting hit, but the refs are not seeing it that way, on my drives.”  If that wasn’t direct enough: “it’s tough playing 46 minutes and only going to the line four times, as much as I attack the rim.”  But asked a few questions later about his criticism of the refs, James was in full denial: “I didn’t talk about the referees.  I was asked a question and I answered it.  I’m going to save my 25K, okay.  So I have not talked about the referees.  Don’t put me in that cloud.”  The myth of LeBron James floats on a different cloud.  One where “the King” doesn’t need to whine for calls, doesn’t let an opponent’s trash talk rattle him, and doesn’t need NBA intervention to help him reach what he has always viewed as his entitlement: an NBA championship.  But back on earth, in the reality of 2016, the myth of LeBron James is increasingly hard to believe.

Advertisement


There will be endless debate about how a play where Green barely makes contact with James can be a flagrant foul (James certainly didn’t respond as if Green made serious contact, and the ref immediately in front of the play didn’t call it).  Others will try to cobble together some theory of intent intent based on plays scattered throughout the playoffs and Green’s career (none of which appear indisputably intentional), while ignoring more egregious acts by members of the Cavs that were dismissed as “scrappy basketball plays” and never reviewed for punishment.  There will be talk of double standards, but the arbitrariness of the NBA’s ruling makes any reference to a “standard” generous.  These debates may suck up all the media bandwidth until Monday night’s game, but ultimately, Draymond Green’s suspension will be an asterisk on this series.  James and the Cavs may have successfully lobbied to change the match-ups in Game 5, but all their hurt feelings can’t change the fundamental differences between these teams: in talent, in coaching, and in the way the players work together as a true team.
A year after bemoaning the fact that the Warriors didn’t face the Cavs at full strength, I expect the Warriors to repay those slights with interest by beating the Cavs on Monday despite being a man down.  Green has spent every second of this season watching the backs of his teammates.  In Game 5, they’ll return the loyalty.  It’s hard to imagine any greater motivation for a team that burns disrespect like rocket fuel than what’s transpired over the past 48 hours.  But while I expect the Warriors’ response to this unfortunate incident to only increase their legend, the same can’t be said for James.  Through all of James’ self-laudatory cliches about leadership, competition and rising to the challenge, remember this: when the time came for James and Green to match-up on the biggest stage, it was LeBron who was too little.

http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2016/06/12/myth-reality-lebron-james/

Very good read
 
I think the Warriors come out with a chip on their shoulder tonight and smoke the Cavs. This is when Curry/Thompson have their big games and end this loser. Can't believe he snitched like that and said "it's hard to take the high road, I've been doing it for 13 years". That's the arrogance/half a high school education shining through his words.
 
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[h1]The Myth and Reality of LeBron James[/h1]

Draymond Green has never believed in the myth of LeBron James.  In December 2012, Green was an unheralded second-round draft-pick, fighting for time in his rookie year.  James was the centerpiece of supposedly the greatest team ever assembled.  The Warriors arrived in Miami in the midst of a successful road trip and went to war against the Heat.  In an effort to slow down a typically dominant performance from James, Mark Jackson gave Green a shot at defending him.  Green denied James on two consecutive trips to the basket.  The third time down, James finally drew a foul on the rookie.  James then turned and barked at Green.  “You too little.”  At that moment, Warriors fans — and the rest of the NBA — learned something important about Green.  He didn’t shy away from the then-best-player-in-the-world.  He didn’t worry about the perceived ridiculousness of some then-nobody jawing at an NBA great.  He turned around, got in LeBron’s face, and answered.  Later that night, Green scored a slashing lay-up with 0.9 seconds left to defeat LeBron and the Heat on their home court, 97-95.  It would be the first time Green bested James.  It wouldn’t be the last.

The Cavs may win Game 5 against a Green-less Warriors, but LeBron James has lost something bigger in the process.  In the fourth quarter of Game 4, James transparently baited Green with a step-over after Green and the Warriors’ defense had owned James on the defensive end all quarter.  The step-over is usually an act reserved for a victor over the dominated — think Allen Iverson over Tyronn Lue.  But James deployed it as a tantrum.  It was the hollow act of someone lashing out in defeat, not boasting in victory.  James then spent his post-game press conference passively-aggressively lobbying for a suspension, pushing the NBA to do what he could not do himself: get past Draymond Green.
The victim narrative is a new look for LeBron, and not one that sits well with his “Greatest” self-mythologizing.  According to James, “some of the words that came out of [Green’s] mouth were a little overboard.”  James immediately characterized the play as one “the League will take a look at.”  James then descended into talk about how “the chips have been stacked up against us all year.”  James and the Cavs apparently haven’t just overcome a historically weak Eastern Conference, a roster assembled specifically to meet James’ demands and a coach chosen with James’ blessing, but also intolerable bias from the referees.  “I’m not quite sure what I can do personally to get to the free-throw line,” James mused.  “I’m getting hit, but the refs are not seeing it that way, on my drives.”  If that wasn’t direct enough: “it’s tough playing 46 minutes and only going to the line four times, as much as I attack the rim.”  But asked a few questions later about his criticism of the refs, James was in full denial: “I didn’t talk about the referees.  I was asked a question and I answered it.  I’m going to save my 25K, okay.  So I have not talked about the referees.  Don’t put me in that cloud.”  The myth of LeBron James floats on a different cloud.  One where “the King” doesn’t need to whine for calls, doesn’t let an opponent’s trash talk rattle him, and doesn’t need NBA intervention to help him reach what he has always viewed as his entitlement: an NBA championship.  But back on earth, in the reality of 2016, the myth of LeBron James is increasingly hard to believe.

Advertisement


There will be endless debate about how a play where Green barely makes contact with James can be a flagrant foul (James certainly didn’t respond as if Green made serious contact, and the ref immediately in front of the play didn’t call it).  Others will try to cobble together some theory of intent intent based on plays scattered throughout the playoffs and Green’s career (none of which appear indisputably intentional), while ignoring more egregious acts by members of the Cavs that were dismissed as “scrappy basketball plays” and never reviewed for punishment.  There will be talk of double standards, but the arbitrariness of the NBA’s ruling makes any reference to a “standard” generous.  These debates may suck up all the media bandwidth until Monday night’s game, but ultimately, Draymond Green’s suspension will be an asterisk on this series.  James and the Cavs may have successfully lobbied to change the match-ups in Game 5, but all their hurt feelings can’t change the fundamental differences between these teams: in talent, in coaching, and in the way the players work together as a true team.
A year after bemoaning the fact that the Warriors didn’t face the Cavs at full strength, I expect the Warriors to repay those slights with interest by beating the Cavs on Monday despite being a man down.  Green has spent every second of this season watching the backs of his teammates.  In Game 5, they’ll return the loyalty.  It’s hard to imagine any greater motivation for a team that burns disrespect like rocket fuel than what’s transpired over the past 48 hours.  But while I expect the Warriors’ response to this unfortunate incident to only increase their legend, the same can’t be said for James.  Through all of James’ self-laudatory cliches about leadership, competition and rising to the challenge, remember this: when the time came for James and Green to match-up on the biggest stage, it was LeBron who was too little.

http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2016/06/12/myth-reality-lebron-james/

This is Pulitzer worthy! :smokin
 
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Tonight is a big night Lebron haters.... after the BAN Lebron complained and whined he got what he wanted in Draymond getting suspended. The Warriors are going to carry out what we have been waiting on all this season.... we all knew that the Cavs would cruise through the garbage Eastern conference.... his 6 years making it to the Finals is a complete joke.... his flopping, his constant whining, his always needing more help, also his telling us that he's going to be alright but we have to go back to our pitiful life.

Whatever it takes to hate with all your heart use it to fuel yourself.... fellow Lebron haters we are all united tonight.... i want to see the pain in Lebum's eyes
 
i want to see this clown  throw another hissy fit and tantrum on the court cause he know his legacy is wack ,  the best loser we've seen since j west. 
 
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End it tonight Warriors. For the haters everywhere.

It would be beautiful to see the front court washed by Ezeli or Varejao :rofl:
 
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Closing the series out with Green suspended because of lebron snitching is going to make all of this so much sweeter
 
 
i want to see this clown  throw another hissy fit and tantrum on the court cause he know his legacy is wack ,  the best loser we've seen since j west.
Aaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyeeeeee. 
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Preparing my slander list as of today

If Dubs win, gonna go guns blazing on LeFraud and the city of Cleveland aka the Factory of Sadness
 
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