Mind the Game - What’s RIGHT With The NBA: Season Finale Live From Fanatics Fest

Episode Date: July 15, 2025

Welcome to the season finale of Mind the Game with LeBron James and Steve Nash. We’ve had a blast this season covering topics like LeBron’s career longevity, Nash’s influence on the NBA..., the return of the midrange, the evolution of the modern playmaker and how teams like the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Indiana Pacers succeeded in 2025. We also spent a few episodes talking to Luka Doncic about youth basketball and Kevin Durant about his storied NBA career. And in this finale, we sum up the theme of Season 2 which is… what’s RIGHT with the NBA. So join us, live from Fanatics Fest in New York City as we celebrate this game we all love. Lastly, we can’t thank you enough for going on this journey with us. We have the best fans in the space and cannot wait to return for Season 3 later this fall. Until then, cheers and Mind the Game.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Who's excited for mind the game? Anyone? We got a wine opener out there. Do my mom got my wine still? Please welcome to the stage, Steve Nash and LeBron James. Yes, sir. Wow. Okay.
Starting point is 00:00:38 This ain't bad, see? Not bad. Not bad, not bad. Great turnout. Great turnout. Thank you. Thank you, everybody. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Much appreciate it. Well, this is Mind the Game from Fanatics Fest, brought to you by Nike. This is actually our last episode of the season. Wow. So, congrats to us. Thank you for all the listen, supports, likes, comments, subscriptions, everything. It's been really an incredible year for us to kind of get a chance to talk hoops, hopefully share some of our experiences.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Yeah. uh dig into some some things around the game that we're passionate about and uh today will be no different than that but a little veno i mean we don't do an episode without i open up a bottle of wine that's just what we do so you know that's how we always kick it off man but um we're happy to be here we appreciate y'all new york city stand up what's up with y'all um and we just want to say thank you guys for allowing us to come talk the game of basketball with y'all do it at a high level and we're super appreciative so Steve let's do it let's do it so who who's enjoying the NBA finals game seven so we have yeah game seven right um we have
Starting point is 00:02:08 the 20th game seven in NBA finals history if uh if the Googles are truthful um which is incredible right like we've both played in game seven I want to hear more about your game seven, particularly in the NBA finals. But let's also play some respect to these two incredible teams. Oklahoma City, yes, Oklahoma City. Any OKC fans out there? Okay, a few, a few. Any Pacers fans out there?
Starting point is 00:02:45 What happened? Why would that be? What's wrong? Oh, okay, I get it, I get it, I get it, I get it. Well, I mean, unfortunately for Nick fans, this Pacers team, though, we have to say it's one of the greatest stories in NBA history. Like it or not, like it or not. I mean, a lot of players that were cast aside that have been on the trade block,
Starting point is 00:03:16 that have been maybe not NBA playoff rotation guys, unquote, who have absolutely come together to play fantastic basketball. We've said it before on the pod. Coaching staff deserves a lot of credit too, but you see a lot of the ingredients of great basketball teams, IQ, connectivity, toughness, their defense has gone to another level. What have you seen in the Pacers? No, I mean, I think you just said it perfectly, Steve. I think when it comes to the two teams that's in the finals right now, obviously both of them
Starting point is 00:03:46 are respected and have earned it. You know, and with the Pacers team, obviously you guys. a lot of them too the last round, but, you know, the way they move the ball, the pace and space that they play with, I think, you know, the best gift that the Pacers have is the unselfishness of Halliburton. I think his ability to get off the ball early, you know, get the ball back in semi-transition, but just the ball is always, the ball has so much energy and to see what the Pacers are doing, you know, with their pace and space, you know, getting the ball up, you know, letting Pascal, you know,
Starting point is 00:04:19 go against the defense before it's set. You know, I think it's just a great way to the game of basketball that the patients are playing right now. For sure. I would say this about Tyrese. I think he's one of the greatest simple early passers I've ever seen. You know, sometimes when you have great vision like Tyrese, you want to hold it to make that killer pass.
Starting point is 00:04:41 Yeah, that home run. Right. You think I can get something better and you might hold it for a second. I think we've both felt that at times. Right. But sometimes he just gets. gets rid of it and what that does is it makes the defense unsettled because they can't cheat they can't help they're always in a bind so i think he's one of the greatest simple early
Starting point is 00:04:58 passes of all time and a big part of their success sure what's up young fellas you see someone up here you like yes sir i'll see you that's great that's great well let's talk about some things that we learned this year in the NBA um you know i got three bullet points The first one being pace and depth. Yeah. Tell me a little bit your perspective on how those two are fit together and how that's changed compared to maybe four, five, six, seven years ago. I mean, I just think it's been, you know, present all year.
Starting point is 00:05:32 You know, how quickly Cleveland ran their sets from start to finish. Obviously, the two teams that we have in the finals, you know, that pace and that depth to be able to continue the energy. The energy does not die down when they make substitution patterns, you know. We talked about in one of our pods when, When T.J. McConnell comes into the game, their pace actually goes higher. You know what I'm saying? So, you know, when Alice Caruso and those guys come in the game,
Starting point is 00:05:58 and also, you know, those guys, it just ramps up. So to have that pace and that quickness getting in and out of your sets, having the depth that they have, it allows you to always be energized, and those guys are playing like, they're playing a high-level basketball as close to 48 minutes as we've seen in a long time. It's great. I mean, you nailed it. And I think we went through an era
Starting point is 00:06:20 where we were trying to find three stars. Right, right, right. But what happens when you have a team built on three stars if it's not built from the ground floor up, like through the draft? When you have, you sign free agents, you have three stars. What happens is, one, you're at risk for injuries derailing your team.
Starting point is 00:06:33 But two, the game has played so fast and so physically nowadays, the three stars have a hard time keeping that level at both ends of the floor. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And it kind of falls apart, both ends. And so we're seeing these two teams with depth. I mean, Rick Carlisle's rolling out
Starting point is 00:06:46 guys who weren't even on the team earlier in the year, Tony Bradley wasn't even in rotation. Guys are fluctuating in and out of the rotation. Like Mathurin played himself out of the rotation at times here, having a big impact in the finals. So that depth becomes so important so they can keep up the physicality and pace. It's been really interesting to see the two teams,
Starting point is 00:07:04 one built from the ground floor, one just built by, you know, quote unquote, scraps around the league they put together that were undervalued and we're seeing them come together and play beautiful basketball. So I agree with you. No, you got to think that some of the biggest guys in this finals
Starting point is 00:07:19 that's making impact are like you said. That was guys that were even giving up from a previous team to look at Neesmith. Right. You know, I feel like, you know, Obie Topping. You know, I feel like here Obie Topping didn't get an opportunity to flourish as much. Neesmith, he was drafted by Boston.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Yeah. Didn't get an opportunity to flourish. You look at Hardinstein. You know, now it's now with O.K., you know, what he was able to do for your franchise last year but bring that toughness to the OKC Thunder. You know, Alice Caruso, obviously, we've seen what he's been able to do,
Starting point is 00:07:50 but all these complimentary guys is what build teams, it's what build winning programs and winning franchises. And like you said, you know, I played in the era as well as of the Big Three era, you know, but it's looking like now the game is starting to shift again to how can we create the most depth, but also how can we create the most energy life? Right.
Starting point is 00:08:10 How can we have the most shelf life out on the floor, you know, to be able to sustain, Okay, maybe it's sustained an injury or sustain or run throughout the course of a game where guys are coming in and it's affectionate all game long, so you said it. Right. Right now, you have to be able to continue to play with pace and physicality. If your pace and your physicality drops, you know what I mean? You're going to go through a period of the game where you're going to give up a 10, 15 point run. How are we doing here?
Starting point is 00:08:34 Cheers, cheers. Cheers, cheers, everybody. Yeah, not bad. Not bad, not bad. So the next bullet point, you guys want LeBron to wave again? There we go. There we go. The next bullet point I have is defensive speed.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Yeah. Teams are playing with pace. They're spreading the floor so far. You have to have speed. You've got to have an abundance of speed to be able to cover bigger spaces than we had to cover in previous generations. Yeah, I mean, you look at the two teams now when you talk about the defensive speed. defensive speed, they're so far different in contrast, but they're kind of similar in same.
Starting point is 00:09:19 You know, you look at OKC, it's a lot of guys that are super scrappy, super flying around. They do a good job of being in the gaps, getting out the gaps, making you drive. And then when the ball hits the paint, it's like a swarm. Like all four or five guys are in the paint, either reaching for the ball, getting taps, you know,
Starting point is 00:09:36 loose balls, and if the ball hits the ground, first to the ground, you know, and you look at the contrasts with them and then the Pacers, they have a lot more Lenther guys, you know, like you said, O.B. Top and Pascal Seacom, you know, Knee Smith, you know, Miles Turner, you know, a lot of, even Tyrese is, as rain, is as, a lange as well. So, you know, it's, contrasts and styles are very different. But the speed, the way they play, and the physicality that they play with defensively are very similar. And mobility. And mobility, yes. You got to be able to move in different directions, cover guys with different responsibilities. Yeah, you don't have many teams in our league to have two or three guys that can pick up 94 feet and make you turn. The patients have Niece Smith, Nimhart, you know, T.J. McConnell, those guys pick up. OKC. They come in with Alex Caruso, Lou Dork, you know, Cason Wallace.
Starting point is 00:10:23 All those guys are coming in and picking up 94 feet, and they're just changing the game defensively, trying to wear on you. So there's not many teams in our league that can put three or four guys out on the floor that can pick up 94 feet and just make you change directions. And that's, I mean, that's why these two teams are in the finals right now, I think. Right. Another indicator of the depth for me is matchups. Like, you know, this game is about fights. Like, styles make fights. And so let's break it down to like even like individual matchups. You know, against the Knicks, you know, Nemhart really struggle with Jalen Brunson.
Starting point is 00:10:55 But Neesmith was able to cause him some problems. It flips. So now Nemhart, who grew up playing against Shea is able to cause Shea some problems. Neesmith struggles with Shea. So it's always about a little bit of styles. Right. One that I think is really fascinating to me, and I want to give him a big shout out as T.J. McConnell. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:13 He is finding his way into the paint relentlessly against incredible defenders. He's getting by Alex Caruso. He's getting by guys like Jalen Williams. These are elite defenders. TJ's a matchup problem for them with his pace, his shiftyness, getting underneath. He's got his little underneath dribble. He's got his little fade away. It's so fascinating to me to realize elite defenders can still struggle with different players.
Starting point is 00:11:36 Have you seen that in your career? Yeah. I mean, when you look at T. Michael McCown on what he's able to do right now in the finals. I think we all look at it like, how was he able to be so successful? You look at TJ's not the tallest guy, not the fastest guy. Doesn't jump, doesn't have a huge vertical. You know, but I think it's here and it's here and it's will.
Starting point is 00:11:53 Yeah. I think the one thing about TJ McConnell is that when you look at a scound report and you read about guys, you know what their go-to moves is. You know what they want to do. You know what they least like to do. But TJ, you don't know what he's going to do. It's just so random with T.J. You don't know when he's gonna pull up and shoot his mid-range fade away in the paint.
Starting point is 00:12:17 You don't know if he's gonna dribble and Nash dribble all up underneath the basket and then go to his fade away. And he's doing, and he's doing that not only when Alice Caruso was guarding him, Kaysen Wallace is guarding him. He's even done it against Hardinstein and also Chet. Chet, right. You know, so he's doing that verse everybody. So I think his, him not being a player that you kind of, you key in on certain things that he do, you know, what he like to go to, has made him be so successful in the final so far. For sure.
Starting point is 00:12:45 I think, like you said, you don't know what he's going to do. One thing you do know he's not looking for is the three, which makes it fascinating because you know, like, okay, he's not going to pull up for three. So you think, let me give him a gap. But he uses that gap. Right. He gets momentum. Yeah, all out Rajjan Rondo. That's what made Rajan Rondo so great, you know, the fact that you knew he was not going to be taking any three.
Starting point is 00:13:04 but he eat up the space and by the time he was up on you it was too late and I think TJ has definitely learned he's found that rhythm and he's a big time player yeah for sure he uses pace but he also uses change of pace and he uses the entire floor so it doesn't matter if he has to beat his guy at half court
Starting point is 00:13:20 or his guy's drop into the free throw line or he's on the sideline he fakes a pitch and he goes just incredible intelligence and he's been sounds weird to say the biggest matchup nightmare in a way other than Pascal
Starting point is 00:13:31 I think Hallie's more of the sets of Right, right, right. Pascal's been a matchup problem and TJ's been a matchup problem. I absolutely agree with you. You just don't know. You don't know what TJ's going to do out on the floor. So it's hard to scout for a guy like that, you know? And, you know, like I said, Pascal being a matchup problem for anybody.
Starting point is 00:13:49 But also, T.J.'s pace and space, man, and his will to go out there and dominate, you know, at his level. It's fascinating to watch, man. You just, it's great. It's great basketball. Yeah. Thank you to our partner Nike for sponsoring this episode. Here's what two decades in the NBA taught me about winning. It's not just talent, it's not just opportunity.
Starting point is 00:14:16 It's about the choices you make when no one's watching. Those 3 a.m. workouts? Choice. Extra reps while others rest? Choice. Film review sessions deep into the night. Another conscious choice. I've lived this journey from Santa Clara to MBA MVP. And now, mentoring the next general I see different challenges and different pressures.
Starting point is 00:14:37 But the fundamental truth remains. The ones who break records, the ones who transform their games, the ones who elevate their teammates, they're all choosing to work harder, making that deliberate decision to push beyond limits, to redefine what's possible. Because in those quiet moments, those grinding hours, that's where winners are built.
Starting point is 00:14:57 Winning isn't just something that happens. You make it happen. As Nike would say, you just do it. Well, shifting gears a little bit, you know, early in the year, the NBA took a little bit of a beating. You know, I think publicly people thought, oh, the game's the same, the regular season doesn't matter, people are playing the same style. You know, we really focused in on that kind of consistently during this podcast season to kind of figure out, like, what is true here? What is great about our game, right? And we've come to the conclusion, we hope you'll agree, the game is amazing.
Starting point is 00:15:44 The game is the best has ever been. The game is as good as it's ever been for sure. The Pace and Space era, a lot of threes. You know, some people can have a problem with that perhaps, but the reality is that's not going away. We're stretching the floor, we're playing with Pace, we're playing more jazz than classical. We're not playing off the same playbook every time down. We're playing read-and-react basketball. So I think once people start to recognize that people are reading and reacting,
Starting point is 00:16:10 using their brains, playing on the fly, it's a beautiful thing to watch. No, absolutely. I mean, you just said it best, you know, Steve. I think the playmaking that goes on in our league, I mean, I remember we did an earlier pod this year in one of our episodes, and you told me, like, in the 1995 season, you know, out of the top 10 points per game leaders, literally there's only one guy in the top five and assists. Right. You know, and that was Michael Jordan at the time.
Starting point is 00:16:35 You know, and you look at it now, 25, 30 years later, and out of the top 10 scores in the NBA, you have five or six guys in the top 10 in the assists. You know, so the playmaking in our game, the different matchups that we see in our game, the different variables that you can see defensively, man-to-man, zone. Guys are even pressing at time, 2-1 press that we haven't seen.
Starting point is 00:16:58 I think that's great. It's just a beautiful thing to watch our game continue to evolve. And I think it's the sky's the limit. We're going to continue to do that. You know, it's beautiful. Well, I have to give you a lot of credit for the playmaking. You know, like LeBron said, you know, nowadays you can't just be a score. If you're just a score, really you come off the bench.
Starting point is 00:17:18 You know, you're a sixth man, seventh man, see if you're hot that night. Nowadays, if you want to be an elite player, you have to be a score and a playmaker. And I think you are a huge, huge part of that trend. You know, 100%. We should. 100%. Yes, yes. What we've seen happen,
Starting point is 00:17:38 and I'll use LeBron as one of the pioneers or, you know, one of the trend centers in this way is we're seeing a big physical athlete that can score, but is also passing, playmaking, but also playing cat and mouse, dissecting the defense, reading the defense, making the defense uncomfortable, making them make hard decisions.
Starting point is 00:17:58 So now we're seeing the byproduct of that throughout the league, right? When I came in the league, way, way, way, way, way to go in the 90s, like LeBron said, you know guys are just coming to score. But nowadays, the defense has gotten more sophisticated. You have to be able to read and react and play. So LeBron coming in the league, let's not forget, the leading score in NBA history. Right here. The leading score.
Starting point is 00:18:19 You know? But also one of the greatest passers and playmakers. Right? and one of the best minds for the game. Mind the game? Minds for the game out there. So you put that together. What are we seeing now?
Starting point is 00:18:36 You know, we're seeing guys like Luca Donchitz, Nicola Yokic, you go around the league. You're seeing so many guys that are taking the ball and manipulating the defense and deciding, how are you playing me? Okay, I'll go score the ball this possession. Oh, you want to load up on me? I'm going to go make plays for my teammate.
Starting point is 00:18:52 So this trend for me is helping elevate the game of basketball. because our lead players are able to do more than one or two things. They're able to do a bit of everything, Swiss Army Night for what the team needs in that moment while still having a huge usage rate. Absolutely, man. You couldn't set it better, man. I think our league is at the best place that has ever been, you know, and, you know, it's beautiful to watch you.
Starting point is 00:19:15 You mentioned Luca, you mentioned, you know, The Joker, Giannis, you know, so many guys that only can score the ball, rebound the ball, pass the ball, facilitate, think with their mind. It's just a beautiful thing, man. And, you know, and we go back to, we're looking at OKC and Indiana. Both teams build up identities and cohesiveness, innovative, offenses, and defenses. But it's just beautiful to watch that. When the ball moves, player movement, everybody feels in a great rhythm. And that's what the game is all about, that.
Starting point is 00:19:43 Everybody's on the floor feel like they're important to the success. And, you know, to see that with OKC and see that with the Patriots now, you know, listen the two best words in sports is game seven all right and we all should be lucky to be able to witness a game seven tomorrow night for the NBA for the NBA finals for the Larry O'Blanc trophy so it's gonna be a beautiful thing for sure yeah I can't wait for that yeah absolutely that's all right we got we got we got a bunch of hold up we got a lot of Nick fans in here huh Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:24 We got any Brooklyn Nets fans in here? Oh man. Damn, Steve. Yeah. Was that boo for the Nets or for Steve? Which won't... So the Nick fans, Knicks fans, y'all good?
Starting point is 00:20:40 Y'all going to the finals next year? Oh, we're gonna see. We go see. We'll see. You know, one of the things I would also say that's been great about the league is watching Offense and defense evolve and push the other. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:57 Evolve and push the other. So we're seeing innovative defenses. You know, we've talked about it, switching defenses, which basically take you out of your offense. You run out of one of all these beautiful sets. We're going to switch all that. Now you're on the clock. Now you've got to play ISO basketball, and it's a spacing game.
Starting point is 00:21:11 So that's why we started playing with pace. Let's get up and down before they can set up, not run sets that they can switch. So trying to play a little bit faster, a little more pace, less walk it down and run sets. So the defense is adapted. They start switching everything. Okay, the offenses start speeding up, right?
Starting point is 00:21:27 So now the defense is adapt again. Let's go some zone. Let's pack the paint. We say we're giving up threes. That's a killer. No, no, no. Our rim is a killer. Let's pack the paint.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Let's keep people out of the paint. It's being in the gaps like OKC. You're seeing the Pacers do it too. We're willing to give up threes, especially on contests, as long as you don't get in on our rim all night. Exactly. So you're seeing that evolve. Then, now, the latest one that I think was fascinating this year, coupled with the zone defense,
Starting point is 00:21:55 and the matchup zones and going zone to men, has been the cutting. Yeah. So Indiana is a great example, but there's been others. Cleveland did a great job. You know, typically in the last 10 years, we've tried to keep the floor space for our playmakers. Give LeBron as much space as possible. You know, my son's teams, they try to shooters so I could get to work, get in the middle, cause problems with the defense.
Starting point is 00:22:15 But what we're seeing now is that teams are getting so good at sitting in the lap of the best player. Get guys cutting, yeah. So guys are starting to cut. Yeah. So Indiana's taking it to a whole new extreme. We've talked about, is this where it's going? You know, from the foul line up, you have players flying in and out of that space, regardless of spacing, creating confusion and willing to just move it and play and trust it.
Starting point is 00:22:37 You think this is where teams are going to start to evolve? Well, I mean, you know our league. Our league has always been a copycat league, you know, and I think that teams will try. But you also have to have the right personnel to be able to be able to be. do the things that OkC and Indiana is doing. Every team is not built the way that they're built. So I think the best thing about our league and the best thing about coaching in our league
Starting point is 00:22:59 is being able to adapt to the personnel that you have. You know, I just don't think that every team has the makeup to be able to pay with the pace and space of Indiana and OKC. But the good thing about our league is what makes coaching so great in our league is being able to adapt to what you have. Adapt to your personnel, adapt to how you guys play, and then you start that from day one. This is how we're going to play,
Starting point is 00:23:21 and there's going to be tweaks throughout the season, okay? Maybe that didn't work out quite well for us early on, but you have a nucleus of how you want to play, and you follow that all the way throughout the whole regular season and into the postseason and hopefully being able to play for a Larry O'Brien trophy. But it's all about your personnel. If you have the right personnel, the right coach and staff,
Starting point is 00:23:41 they'll put them in the right position to succeed. It's a great point. I think, like, high school and college teams, You know, a lot of times the coach has been there for a while, has a blueprint. This is how we do it. Yeah, of course, you adapt and you adjust your team. NBA teams, I think the variance of adaptation is huge. Like, I don't think the Pacers set out this year and said, this is what we're going to be like.
Starting point is 00:23:59 I think they built. They adapted. They built again. They added, they subtracted. They built. Same with OKC. They continue to evolve. It's kind of like a living organism, right?
Starting point is 00:24:09 So I think it's always fascinating to see how a team starts the year, what they add, what they subtract, how they evolve. I mean, you've been on championship teams. Do you think that's even going in a higher cadence nowadays? Yeah, I think so. I mean, I think you said it right there, man. I think the game continues to involve, and I think coaching continues to involve. And they're seeing how much they can press the limit on what they have
Starting point is 00:24:32 and even going further. But also more important, like we always talk about, it looks chaotic and it looks random, but it's not. You know, and when you have guys with good IQ and cohesitives, they're able to do things on the floor that to the, to the normal fan, you would think it's random, you would think it's chaotic, but it's actually very well thought out
Starting point is 00:24:53 and very well practiced and very well, you know, demanded. Details. Details. So, you know, I think it's a beautiful thing. More teams are gonna try to adapt it, more teams are gonna try to play with it. Because it creates,
Starting point is 00:25:06 the one thing about our league is being able to create confusion out on the floor for the defenses. Like you said, it's so many different ways that people are throwing you defensively. Man to man, zone, two to one press, boxing one, triangle and two. They're trying everything.
Starting point is 00:25:20 Right. You know, so to be able to create the most confusion you can offensively, it's going to make you more successful than any team in our league. And, you know, I think that's going to be adapted by a lot of streams. So that adaptation process can be tricky, right? The number one thing about adapting is buy-in. Yeah, yeah. Right, buy-in.
Starting point is 00:25:38 Winning is a choice. Winning is a choice, and you have to buy in and sacrifice. I want to hear from you a little bit about the sacrifices, some of your championship teams made, what that process was like. You start a season, everyone's like, well, I'm going to get off this year. This is my role, and it's always slightly inflated.
Starting point is 00:25:57 At some point, everyone has to sacrifice a bit of themselves if you want to be a championship caliber team. Listen, the only way to win a championship is that everybody is a MVP in their role, you know, and able to sacrifice their own personal stats, personal beliefs for the betterment of the team. You know, there's a pecking order in our team. You guys know who the stars is.
Starting point is 00:26:16 You guys know who the role players are. You guys know what the garbage guys are. You know, come in and do all the garbage work, all the, you know, first to the floor, taking the charges, you know, do the things. You guys know who the vocal leaders is. You know who the silent assassins are. There's a, when that thing is met and it's laid out not only by the coaches. See, the problem with our league sometimes is that players are always looking for the coaches to make those things happen.
Starting point is 00:26:44 It's the players in the locker room that hold each other accountable. That's when you get the best team. When guys can come to the locker room and hold each other accountable and know how to talk to each other, or I'm bad mouth for you or you're saying something to me
Starting point is 00:26:57 and not take it personal because we have one common goal and that's to win a championship. When you win a championship, everybody eats. Everybody gets paid, everybody's seen, everybody's love. And that's the only thing
Starting point is 00:27:11 that only matters. But it can only happen the coaching staff can only do so much the coaching staff gonna put you the game plan together they're gonna tell you this is what we need to do this is how we're gonna execute we're gonna give you the game plan
Starting point is 00:27:24 but the players got to go out and do the job you know and when the players hold each other accountable that's when the job gets done and that's that's happened on four times in my career I've been able to win four championships
Starting point is 00:27:39 and that's that that was one of the number one agree is Obviously going on and getting a job done, too, but just holding each other accountable. Great message. Great mention for young players out there, too, not just in the NBA, high school, college, learning to play, like the responsibility of trying to pick up your teammates. Set an example. Yeah, yeah. One through 12 has a leadership responsibility, right?
Starting point is 00:27:59 It's not just the quote-unquote leader. Right, right. Everyone on the team leads by how they behave. Did they get there on time or early? Did they do their extra work? Did they support their teammates? Talk a little bit about your finals teams. Win or lose playing that way to get to the finals.
Starting point is 00:28:12 It's got to be like basketball Nirvana to be on a team like that that you trust and you know every night is going to give themselves a chance to win. I think the best feeling for me as a player is that when the national anthem is going on and I usually stand on the end is that when I can look down the road and I know that I got 11 other guys,
Starting point is 00:28:32 13 other guys that's in the foxhole with me. And I know for sure that if it's a grenade thrown in the foxhole, we don't all stand there. Like we want to die for this. game, you know, and that is a beautiful feeling where you can look to your left and look all the way down the road, either if I was teammates with Duane Wade, Chris Bosch, Adonis Haslam, James Jones, Mike Miller, you know, the rest of the crew, or if I look to my left and I saw, you know, Kevin Love, Kyrie Irvin, you know, J.R. Smith, Imar Shepard, Tristan Thompson,
Starting point is 00:29:03 Channy Fry, Richard Jefferson, or Anthony Davis, you know, Alice Caruso, Ray John Rondo, you know, Catavius Carwell Pope, you know, Danny green and looking at my let's just knowing guys that you know that's willing to die for it on the floor and be in the foxhole with you there's no better feeling than that man there's no better feeling yeah absolutely this episode is sponsored in part by american express american express knows that for an obsessive basketball fan like me the playoffs mean a lot of travel time between Broadcasting games and catching up with old teammates, I'm on the road almost every week, from Boston to L.A. and everywhere in between. After all these years, I've learned that the journey
Starting point is 00:29:50 is as important as the destination. That's why I've always tried to find a spot to stretch, grab a coffee, and get my mind right before heading over to the arena. Fortunately, there's a card that makes every part of that journey better. With Amex Platinum, you earn five times membership rewards points. On prepaid hotels and flights, book through AmexTravel.com. On up to 500, thousand dollars on flight purchases per year plus you get access to the centurion lounge which makes travel that much more enjoyable that's the powerful backing of american express terms apply for more information visit americanexpress.com slash travel How y'all doing out there?
Starting point is 00:30:34 Y'all good? Do we have time to open it up? We have some fan questions? I think it's time to hit some fan questions. Yeah, what do you think? Should we do this? Anyone send in a tweet with a question? Did you guys send y'all questions answer us?
Starting point is 00:30:51 Okay, I think we got some, right? Yeah, we got to have some. Yeah, we got to have some questions. All right? Number one from Nahil, which player would each of you want to play with from a previous era before you were drafted? So which player from a previous era that we will want to play with? Wow. You're first, man. You're first, man. There's so many, right? There's so many, like, you know, like one, for me being a point guard, like Magic Johnson. Oh, yeah, yeah, man.
Starting point is 00:31:27 Was, I mean, I remember just how he inspired me as a kid. You know, I don't know if I'd want to play with him, but my hero, the one person I tried to emulate was Isaiah Thomas. You know, smaller guard, that was just super competitive. And then you go back, you know, Oscar Robertsons, Greenout Abdul-Jabars, Will Chamberlain, Bill Russell, you go forever. So that's an amazing question.
Starting point is 00:31:51 It's hard for me to pick one. Like I said, my hero was Isaiah, Thomas, Magic Johnson was crazy inspirational, but if I had to have like maybe someone that complimented me, you know, that's a fascinating question that I'd love to think about. You know, because the game changes. Right, right, right, right. The eras change. Like, ah, I got to play with Dirk Nowitsky and Amari Stodomar.
Starting point is 00:32:13 Right, right. Two great guys that we love playing together, could compliment each other, worked out of each other, like, let me think about that for a minute. What about you? When you talk about inspiration, there was nobody more inspiring to me to my production. inspiring to me to Michael Jordan. I mean, you know, and, you know, for me, I think our games would have complimented as well. He was a, MJ was a flat-out score. You know, he was a score, score, score.
Starting point is 00:32:39 He had a score's mentality if I had to pick him. But I know I can't pick him because I know how social media works. You my man is going to be like, oh, you want to play with Michael Jordan too? You to play with everybody else, God damn it. I didn't ask the question. I'm only answering it, guys. I didn't ask the question. But MJ was inspiration.
Starting point is 00:33:03 Anthony Penny Hardaway was the inspiration to me. Grant Hill was an inspiration to me growing up. Like that point four, Scotty Pippen, that point four guys, like Penny, like Grand Hill, like Scotty. Those guys kind of inspired me because I kind of wanted to be that point for us. So, oh, there's some guys. I can see the headline already.
Starting point is 00:33:20 LeBron wants to play with Michael Jordan. Like I see it already, that's weird. Don't be weird. Don't be weird. Don't be weird. I like it. I mean, all the guys he named, I think I did play again. So it doesn't really count for me. I was going to say, I mean, I think of Kobe, but I actually played with Kobe in the Olympics. So, you know, rest his soul. Great, great Kobe. Great Kobe. Amazing. Next question. Yeah, our great director, Jason Gallagher. He's giving us questions. What do you got, Jason? Okay, this one's from Mac Boy. Question for Steve. What advice would you give to LeBron as he nears the back half of his career? Well, that's a great question.
Starting point is 00:33:56 You know, unsolicited advice. But the biggest thing that I would say is that I understand a lot of where LeBron is right now. And having done this podcast with him, he's actually approaching it in an unbelievable manner. So my advice would be continue. And what is that? What is he continuing? We talked about in episode one. It's about the process for him.
Starting point is 00:34:20 It's about adhering to a standard of trying to get the most out of his. game, his body, his mind every single day. Like, that's what this is all about. I think, I want to hear you say this, but talk about it, but that's a way of life, right? Like, how does that feel every day to still be so deep in your process at 40 years old and dominating?
Starting point is 00:34:39 I mean, the process is the only thing that matters to me. You know, I think when you fall in love with the process of what you want to do, and that's what anything, that's not just basketball, that's whatever you guys are inspiring to do, you have to fall in love with the process, The end result will happen organically and it'll make it so much more worth your while when you fall in love with the process, okay? Like don't cheat the process, don't cut corners, fall in love with the process and everything is to take care of itself.
Starting point is 00:35:09 So that's what I've been able to do for my career. So that's my words of advice to all you guys, the process. And that goes for everything. That's not just basketball. That's life, man. Whatever you want to do in life. That's a fulfilling, inspiring way to live. So all you kids out there, like really try to think about that. Like, what does that mean for you?
Starting point is 00:35:32 Like, maybe you haven't found your thing yet. But practice it at school, sports, music, whatever it is. Practice it. Try to get closer to your process. What is a good process system? He's mastered it, right? That's why you're seeing the results. One thing I'd also like to say that I really admire about LeBron is the way he adapted this season to playing with Luca.
Starting point is 00:35:53 That takes a lot of maturity. It takes a lot of sacrifice. He approached this as a gift and an opportunity to make a team as good as it could possibly be. Now it was slammed together quick. You know, they lost early in the playoffs, but I think we saw the seeds of a team that was this close to going deep in the playoffs,
Starting point is 00:36:16 making a run for a title. As that roster builds, the possibility is there. You can't do that unless you're willing to sacrifice and grow and play slightly different. Playing in a way that complements your teammates. So my advice would be those two things. Continue to find that sacrifice. It's not like his numbers dipped.
Starting point is 00:36:33 He just did it in different ways. But that's hard for players who have played 15, 18, 20, 22? 22. 22 years in the league. So, you know. Jay, we got one more. One more, last question, Jay. Yeah, one more.
Starting point is 00:36:51 Rock. Brock asked the question, we went from the Big Three era to the era of depth. What do you believe to be the next iteration of roster development that define team success in the future? That's an easy answer for me. You find a guy like Wimby. If you can find a guy, oh my goodness, Wimby, I was just standing next to him while we were shooting the shop. This guy, I feel like he's grown another two or three inches for sure. in the off season. But I mean, the game is going to continue to evolve. You know, like you said,
Starting point is 00:37:27 the Big Three era had his moment. The Big Three era has always had his moment, you know, way before myself, De Wade, the boss came together. You know, you had, you know, Will Chamberlain and Jay West and Elgin Baylor, they played together, you know, you, you had so many guys that's the Big Three era. So, Bird, Parris, McHale, exactly, Jordan, Pippin, Robin, you know, so like, you know, the victory era will always kind of be there. but having depth, you know, having been able to have the ability to bring in multiple guys that can do multiple things. I think that's the area that we may fall into, but whatever error and however the game
Starting point is 00:38:04 shakes itself, just know, guys, that we're listening to y'all, and we're going to put the best product on the floor every single night because we hear y'all talking and we know y'all love our game, so I appreciate it. I really thank you for real. Absolutely. Season two. That's two. Excuse it two.
Starting point is 00:38:26 Two. Excuse a two. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you, for you, buddy. Thanks for you, buddy. Thanks for watching Mind the Game.
Starting point is 00:38:44 If you enjoyed the show, please subscribe for more content. Thank you.

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