The favorites rivalry that shows no signs of stoppingHow rivalry has helped the NBA
The
NBA really struggled in the 1980s. Ratings were bad, attendance was low and
America, generally, did not care about professional basketball the way it does
today. The Magic Johnson-Larry Bird rivalry saved professional basketball. The
NBA, marketing geniuses that they are, built excitement out of the rivalry between
Magic’s Lakers and Bird’s Celtics.
Magic Johnson was all about show-time—behind
the back passes and dunks and Hollywood glamour. Larry Bird, at least as the
NBA portrayed him, was just a country boy from French Lick, Ind. transported
to hard-working Boston, with a pure shooting stroke and a no-nonsense
competitive attitude. It was Hollywood versus hard work. West versus East. Glam
versus elbow grease. Magic and Bird were marketed as polar opposites, battled
several times for NBA titles and the NBA reaped the rewards from the
outstanding rivalry they manufactured.
Much
has changed in the NBA since 1987, the last time Magic and Bird met in the NBA
finals. Michael Jordan has come and gone, and come and gone, and come and gone again. Franchises have expanded and relocated. New
rivalries have formed. Emerging right now, before our lucky eyes, is the
best NBA rivalry since the 1980s. The league’s newest and most important
rivalry features a man who represents everything that has ever been right with
humanity, Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant, versus the archangel of basketball
evil, Miami’s LeBron James.
These
two men are, undoubtedly, the two best basketball players in the world. They are
also the two most polarizing basketball forces on the planet.
Their on-floor demeanors are entirely different. Durant appears to be the kind
of player who will chit-chat with your grandma on the sideline during a free
throw. James appears to be the kind of guy who might flip off your grandma in
traffic on the way to the arena.
Their playing styles are different. Durant
scores early and often every game, usually with great touch and skill. James
scores in lower numbers with brute force and is the kind of athlete you might
see once every 50 years. Even as their personas grow more alike, they are still
different. Durant, with his “KD is not nice” campaign seeks to rework his image
as, in the very kindest of ways, a tough competitor. James, with his millions
of commercials running 24 hours per day, featuring him hanging out with kids or
playing on his phone like a goofball, seeks to reestablish himself as he once
was—relatable Mr. Nice Guy, darling of the NBA. Durant wants to grow mean and
James wants you to know he means well.
The
issue with this rivalry, the one that separates these two players from becoming
like Magic and Bird, is that they are the absolute worst thing that rivals can
be—friends. They train together in
the summer. They play on the same Olympic teams. They interact on social media.
It is almost cringeworthy. James and Durant actually like and respect each
other. How could Durant, the patron saint of the NBA, respect and even admire
the most nefarious force in professional sports, the same man who mercilessly
ripped the heart out of every member of his hometown on an hour-long television
special without second-thought? How can we hate Lebron if Kevin does not even
hate LeBron?! The answer, simply, is that we cannot. Or, at least, that we
should not.
Appearances
are not always accurate. Durant may be the nicest guy you ever meet, but it is
likely that some of his nice-guy persona has been crystallized and exaggerated
by the media. James did not help his image much by leaving Cleveland, but much
of the evil thrust upon his character was attributed to him by the media to
improve ratings.
To hate James, as many people do, is to hate basketball greatness.
Due to the fact that Michael Jordan was in his prime while most of us were
still five or six years old, and pushing all Kobe Bryant arguments aside, LeBron James will
likely be the greatest NBA player we ever see. He is a tremendously talented
athlete and basketball player. That, at least for right now, is a fact.
Durant
has a chance to exceed James’ legacy, but not until he wins at least a few
titles. Every time you depreciate James’ acts of basketball greatness by
commenting on what was probably a falsely constructed negative quality of his
character—or a real one, like his receding hairline—you also depreciate
Durant’s basketball greatness by moving the conversation from the court to the
personal sphere.
The two men will be forever paired. Coincidentally, by depreciating
James’ greatness, Durant’s greatness lessens by extension. Stop burying the
NBA’s greatest rivalry, and the greatness of the world’s most-likable
superstar, under the weight of your own opinion.
As a fan, you have the opportunity to witness one of the greatest sports rivalries, ever. Two talents like these do not come along very often. Accept them for who
they are. Love Durant and
James the same way you love Harry Potter and Lord Voldemort. Love Durant like
you love Harry, as a force of pure goodness. Love James like you secretly love
Voldemort, as a contrasting force of evil who brings out the greatness in your
hero. At the very least, love the rivalry between these two outstanding talents
and competitors and be grateful you were lucky enough to see it all unfold.