Skip to main content

Russell Westbrook learns what it's like to play in LeBron James' world as Lakers' season goes sideways


 


Russell Westbrook is learning the most important of lessons about being LeBron James' teammate in the most brutal of ways: Everything you thought you knew about life in the NBA is enhanced and magnified when you play with the King.


LeBron is an amplifier. And Westbrook is learning firsthand the fact that the physics of LeBron's world are not the same as those for the rest of the league. 


Everything shifts, expands and shrinks. The spotlight. Your money. Your very standing.


And when you fail -- as a team, as a player, as the Lakers and Westbrook clearly have together -- the physics of LeBron's world can be brutal.


The Lakers are 28-36. They are ninth in the Western Conference and 4.5 games behind the eighth seed with 18 games left in the regular season, meaning they may need to win two games in a row simply to advance to a seven-game series they'll almost certainly lose. 


Bad times indeed.


And in this worst-Lakers timeline reality, the heat, as it does, has fallen far and wide. On Anthony Davis. On head coach Frank Vogel, who The Athletic reported is likely to be fired barring a postseason miracle, a fact CBS Sports has confirmed. On LeBron, to a degree. And very much on Westbrook and his struggles. 


Enter the "Westbrick" chants that have proliferated.


"When it comes to basketball," Westbrook told the media Monday night, after another Lakers loss, this one to the Spurs, "I don't mind the criticism of missing and making shots. But the moment it becomes where my name is getting shamed, it becomes an issue."


What he said next is fair. It's reasonable, to a degree, if fairness ruled. But, as Clint Eastwood said in his movie "Unforgiven," "Deserves got nothing to do with it."


"I've kind of let it go in the past because it never really bothered me," Westbrook continued. "But it really kind of hit me the other day. Me and my wife were at teacher-parent conferences for my son. And the teacher told me, 'Noah, he's so proud of his last name. He writes it everywhere. He writes it on everything. He tells everybody and walks around and says, 'I'm Westbrook.' ... And I kind of sat there in shock, and it hit me, like, 'Damn. I can no longer allow people [to besmirch my name].'"


It's reasonable for Westbrook to not want his last name used as a taunt. When you're a father, things look different. It's also true -- quite true -- that being mocked is part of the reality of playing in the NBA.


Why, now, after so many years of both excellence and inevitable letdowns -- and the accompanying ridicule -- is Westbrook reacting?


Because the physics of LeBron's world, and what it means to step into it, isn't like anything you've experienced before. Even if you're Russell Westbrook.


Especially if you're Russell Westbrook.


That's part of the reason why Westbrook has struggled so mightily in Los Angeles. Yes, he is a terrible fit for LeBron James' team. Yes, Westbrook's decline has coincided with the game itself evolving radically away from his style of play. Yes, his shooting, to say the least, is not ideal.


But the sheer weight of it all in LeBron's presence has ratcheted up the tension, exacerbated the nerves and weighed down on a once-great player. If you've once touched greatness, failure feels harsher. If you've handled legit burdens before -- of, say, having to step in when James Harden abdicated, or to carry a team -- the shocking weight that comes with being a Laker and LeBron's teammate shames more deeply.


This is Westbrook, the flailing player, the defensive father, the star with no more glow: Broken as much by his shortcoming as the gravitational give and take of being on a LeBron James team.


You'd think, having played with Kevin Durant, won an MVP, played with Harden and gilded for himself already a sure-fire ticket to the Hall of Fame, that Westbrook would be immune to the "LeBron Effect."


But Durant is not LeBron. No one is. LeBron James is a lighting rod, a superstar, the likely future NBA GOAT, a divisive political figure, a magnet of expectation, a locker room changer, an amplifier, an activist, a mogul, a touchstone to all the good and bad that comes with the highest levels of fame an American sports star can confer -- all cloaked in a man complicated in the extreme whose burdens and gifts are equal, and equally distributed to those around him, whether they can handle them or not.


This reality has swallowed other greats -- Hall of Fame players -- before. Key example: Chris Bosh, an NBA star who during his time with LeBron often shriveled down to the size of an afterthought. 


Before and after LeBron, before Bosh had to retire from the NBA for health reasons, he was a star and the focal point of two teams. With LeBron? He was often simply overmatched by the centrifugal forces Westbrook now finds himself buffeted by.


Bosh was often lost in 2010-11, that first year in Miami for the Big Three. He scored zero points in Game 7 of the 2013 NBA Finals, a game the Heat -- and LeBron -- won nonetheless.


This is what Westbrook must master, the facts of life in LeBron's orbit. Shoot better? Yes. Play better? Of course. Hope for a fit or Lakers turnaround that turns Russ' L.A. tenure into a shocking success? No doubt. 


But for that to happen, Westbrook will have to do the hardest thing there is in the NBA: Learn to play in LeBron James' world, where the rules are different, and the stakes higher, even for those who in the past thought they understood NBA pressure and expectation.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

From Deep: At long last, Nikola Jokic's Nuggets can envision getting to the top of the mountain

  Jamal Murray tore his ACL on April 12, 2021. Leading up to that night, he'd been playing at an All-NBA level for two months: In a 25-game stretch, Murray averaged 24.1 points on .509/.459/.935 shooting splits, 4.2 rebounds and 5.2 assists. He was even more efficient than he was in the bubble playoffs, and his defense had improved, too. Murray only got to play with Aaron Gordon, the Denver Nuggets' big trade-deadline addition, for five games. They won them all except the one in which Murray got injured. In 110 minutes, their new starting five scored slightly more efficiently than any iteration of the Kevin Durant-era death lineup in Golden State and defended like a top-five team. Two Nikola Jokic MVP awards later, Murray is back. So is Michael Porter Jr., who signed a five-year extension about a year ago and needed back surgery nine games into the 2020-21 season. The Nuggets remember how easily everything slid into place with Gordon in the mix. Newcomer Kentavious Caldwell-Pop...

Klay Thompson to sit out Warriors preseason games in Japan as Kerr says he needs more time to ramp-up

  Klay Thompson may have returned healthy to the Golden State Warriors last season, but the scars from his two missed seasons are still quite visible. The Warriors played their first of two preseason games against the Washington Wizards on Friday and will play another on Sunday, but Warriors coach Steve Kerr said that Thompson will not be playing at all during the trip to Japan. "Just feel more comfortable giving him a little more of a ramp up," Kerr said before Friday's victory over Washington. "He's just not quite ready to play at this point just based on where, you know, we're so early in camp. We just want to be safe and make sure he gets a good ramp-up before he plays in games." Typically, so little time to ramp up wouldn't be a problem for a veteran in a preseason context. The games tend to be so low-impact and demand so few minutes out of a team's best players that they can safely jog through them. Stephen Curry and Draymond Green played 1...

LeBron James says he has 'no relationship' with Lakers legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

  It's not a matter of if LeBron James passes Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the No. 1 spot on the NBA's all-time scoring list, it's when. James sits just 1,326 points away from passing the Hall of Famer and Los Angeles Lakers legend, a milestone that should happen at some point this season given James is still performing at peak levels and is coming off a year in which he averaged over 30 points a night. If he averages around the same amount of points as he did a season ago for the Lakers, James could break the record somewhere in the middle of the season, assuming he stays healthy. It's a highly anticipated moment heading into the season, but in regards to LeBron's thoughts about and his relationship with Abdul-Jabbar, he didn't have much to say on the matter. Following the Lakers first preseason game Monday night, a reporter asked James what his thoughts were on the Lakers legend and if the two had any relationship, to which LeBron gave a very short answer. "No...