The Return of the NBA: How the League Got Its Groove Back

Jack Vuylsteke by Correspondent Written on February 18, 2008
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The March issue of ESPN The Magazine features an interview with the man himself, Michael Jeffrey Jordan, about what he thinks is wrong with the NBA and what he thinks could be done to fix it.

Not to discredit ESPN or my childhood hero, but I think the NBA has done a nice job of fixing itself over the last five years.

Five years ago, the NBA was nearly unwatchable.  It is difficult to pinpoint exactly why, but as a guy who has never lost his love for the game of basketball, I can tell you that something was wrong with the league.  The image of the game was all wrong, the public put basketball on the backburner, the Finals (in 2002-2003, Nets vs. Spurs) were the least watched Finals of all time, and Michael Jeffrey Jordan announced his third (and final) retirement from the league.

Leaving a league that was already scrambling for its life in even more jeopardy.

You can say Jordan really retired in 1998, the year the Bulls' dynasty died.  But just the thought of having him in the league kept me interested and kept that intangible early 90s, "NBA on NBC", Bob Costas, Marv Albert, "Jordan...YES!!" flair in the league.

When he walked away, he left some big Nikes to fill.

The roadblocks have been there for the NBA.  After the Pistons-Pacers brawl, I thought the league was never going to recover.  That was a consummation of what the NBA was mired in—fans who didn't like what they saw on the court, and players who didn't care about the fans.

The league did recover though, mostly thanks to the development of the right types of superstars.

It's taken awhile, but after this All-Star Weekend, I think it's safe to say the league is back to the prowess that it had back when I was a kid, when I first realized that basketball was more than a game to me, but a way of life. 

I couldn't be more excited.

The NBA is getting stronger because it is evolving into a league where superstars are just the best players on a five man team with an eight man rotation, not the whole team.  Think about it.  On every team in the league, there is at least two or three guys you can name off as being the stalwarts of that particular jersey.  This has been contributed to by the globalization of the league for sure, but America has grown some pretty nice talent for itself in the past few years.

LeBron James is, though cliche, the messiah of NBA Basketball.  He had himself a nice weekend to say the least, and he's going to have himself a brilliant career.  LeBron has all the talent you could ask for, a nice little mean streak in him when he needs it, and the ability to make anyone, be they a casual hoops fan or an NBA scout sit back and say "Wow.  Did he really just do that?"

Carmelo Anthony is, if I must be so bold, the Bird to LeBron's Jordan, except without the six year age deferential.  These two are going to go at it for years to come, and Carmelo can most certainly play in his own right.

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written on February 18, 2008 Sports

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