Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Shattered Glass Ops

LeBron
G Fiume/Getty Images
LeBron James was an all-state wide receiver in high school. Is he considering a jump to the NFL?


It was a quiet Tuesday afternoon in the NBA world. With news of 100 games being canceled, fans are taking long walks outside, kicking pebbles with their hands in their pockets, and wondering when all this bad news will end. Bubbles have been burst and hopes of the season starting on time have been extinguished by billionaires.

Nothing worth getting excited about.

... until this happened:


@ClaytonESPN When is the deadline for a team to sign a free agent?Tue Oct 11 18:51:02 via Echofon


That's LeBron James asking ESPN NFL reporter John Clayton about the deadline for free agents to sign with an NFL club. And Twitter promptly blew up in a speculative inferno.

Obviously, LeBron is trying to stir up some fun by asking an innocent question -- innocent if it was asked by anyone other than LeBron. Of course, LeBron isn't your typical athlete.

Standing at 6-foot-9, 250 pounds, he would be a protypical tight-end with freakish athleticism, speed, and hands. Because of the lockout, he's free to do what he wants with his career. David Stern is a powerful man, but he is powerless against this.

We've seen cross-sport athletes before -- Michael Jordan, Danny Ainge, Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders to name a few -- so there's precedence for such a move. He played football in high school and was first-team all-state playing wide receiver as a sophomore.

Our own Brian Windhorst, who went to the same high school as LeBron, informs us on Twitter that LeBron was an absolute terror to guard, especially on fades to the back of the endzone. LeBron was 6-foot-6 at the time when he played for St. Vincent-St. Mary's, going against 5-foot-10 cornerbacks. He recently suited up for his high school squad in practice and that sparked national headlines.

The question of LeBron James' football talents have been broached before. In an ESPN.com story two years ago, Green Bay Packers Hall of Famer Mark Murphy said of LeBron:

"I've been around a lot of great receivers. I tell people that I rate my top receivers -- coaching, playing or watching -- as James Lofton, Jerry Rice, Steve Largent and LeBron James."

Murphy went on to say that he swears LeBron could have gone straight to the NFL out of high school.

Sure, this is probably just a bored athlete toying with a gullible audience. But, man, it's a spectacular way to ignite some water cooler chatter, isn't it?

Would Cleveland Browns fans approve of his signing? For that matter, would the winless Miami Dolphins want him, knowing that it could potentially jeopardize both his Heat career and the Andrew Luck sweepstakes? Knowing that LeBron is a big fan of the Dallas Cowboys, how much would deep-pocketed owner Jerry Jones offer him to suit up for America's team?

Perhaps the most important question:

Is Pat Riley conscious?

UPDATE:

John Clayton responds!


LeBron, sorry to get back to you so late. Trade deadline next Tuesday 4 p.m. Free agency goes until last team is eliminated. Game on.Tue Oct 11 21:03:04 via yoono


Clayton added some advice: "LeBron,, don't look at the Philadelphia Eagles. You're already on a Dream Team."

Also, the Eagles have been terrible. LeBron wrapped up the exchange:


@ClaytonESPN All good, Thanks Clayton!Tue Oct 11 21:08:29 via Echofon

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Old v.s. New Media

The media advances over the years has been incredible. All media is advancing so fast from the advancement of telegraphs to cell phones, from writing on stone to sending newspapers all over the states, there are so many things that have advanced in media, and i believe its just going to get more advanced.
Before cell phones, computers and modern day newspapers, some of the only ways to spread media was smoke signals, word of mouth, and fireworks. Everything in media has advanced greatly in such a short period of time. For example, newspapers. They used to only be monthly newspapers or newspapers that were just written on stone or scribes. The only way newspapers would be issued more than once a month is if something really important happened in that area that absolutly needed to be shared with the public. Also with cell phones. We can now also make calls, texts, or surf the web whenever or whereever we want with the cell phone companies "smart phones". Cell phones only came out in the early 1990's, and there was no such thing as texting, or surfing the internet from your phone. They have came a long ways in such a short period of time. The internet is another thing that has advanced greatly. when the internet came out, only imporrtant buildngs, or scientists had access to the internet. Now, almost anywhere you go, they have internet. It also was a long dial up process that needed an ethernet cord in order to get online. Now we have wireless, wifi, and high speed internet access almost anywhere you go.
Overall, both the media and technology have advanced so much in such a short period of time. It is weird to think about how much more technology and media can advance. Does technology and media have limits? In my opinion, both media and technology will never have limits set to them. There will always be the next best technological device that comes out that helps media also advance.