The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - LAF PRESENTS THE STEP BACK - The Chosen One (feat. Sonny Vaccaro)

Episode Date: May 12, 2026

In the season premiere, Dan, Amin, and Izzy go back to the Sports Illustrated cover that turned a teenager into an industry, re-reading the prophecy with the very people who helped craft it. Plus: a r...esplendent Sonny Vaccaro joins us to re-live his failed $100 million offer to bring The Kid from Akron to Adidas. All that AND real talk about LeBron's untold origin story. Homework for this episode: • "Ahead of His Class" by Grant Wahl (Sports Illustrated, 2002) https://vault.si.com/vault/2002/02/18/ahead-of-his-class-ohio-high-school-junior-lebron-james-is-so-good-that-hes-already-being-mentioned-as-the-heir-to-air-jordan Homework for the next week's episode: • "The Decision" (ESPN, 2010) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Afpgnb_9bA4 From our guest: • "Legends and Soles: The Memoir of an American Original" by Sonny Vaccaro with Armen Keteyian https://www.harpercollins.com/products/legends-and-soles-sonny-vaccaroarmen-keteyian Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Dan, what is this relic that you're holding in your hands? Describe what you're holding. I'm looking right now at Pudge Rodriguez's statue that he used to have on his front lawn of himself. It's ridiculous. But it's an artifact, an heirloom from a different time when people would read. I don't even know where you'd get this now. But it's LeBron cover. And it is crazy to think that this was all preordained, that everyone knew this was going to happen by putting a 17-year-old on the cover.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Dan, I'm going to help you get into that frame of mind. So it's February 2002. This part might not help me. The Patriots had just won the Super Bowl. 36. That could be at any time. It could be at any time in this century. On top of the billboard charts,
Starting point is 00:00:42 Jarlane and Ashanti, always on time. Yep. Right behind them, Nickelback. Nice. Nickelback, how you reminded. So a long time ago. Been a long time ago. Different time.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Do you, Dan, now that I've painted the picture, do you remember where you were or your thoughts when you saw that initially? Okay, I'm looking at this now. I'm looking at the headline now and you tell me what I'm supposed to think when this is a headline on a story about a 17 year old that's in a national magazine.
Starting point is 00:01:07 Ohio High School Jr. LeBron James is so good that he's already being mentioned as the heir to air Jordan. Get the fuck out of here. You can't write that headline about a 17 year old and take it seriously? I'm tired of this man being celebrated. For what?
Starting point is 00:01:26 This is the stepback. Drive steps back, puts up a three. Bang! From downtown! The Cleveland Cavaliers select LeBron James. LeBron, what's your decision? I made a difficult decision, but I understood what my future was about. I believe our president is trying to divide us. My first response was you bum.
Starting point is 00:01:47 Welcome to episode one. I was on the cover of Sports Illustrated. The Chosen One. At that moment, around 17, I knew I could be LeBron. Okay, guys, well, I kind of want to explain to the audience. That's what we're doing here, right? This is the step back. It's a limited series, and every season we're going to focus on a single topic.
Starting point is 00:02:09 All I heard was limited there, that this is a limited series, that the series is filled with limitations. Oh, that's... I would say we're doing this because this is the most recognizable, famous, transcendent athlete of, I'm going to say a generation, but it's probably two, if you count generations as 20 to 25 years. He's the Paul Bunyan of the NBA, right? And for the three of us, we're old enough where we all experienced it real time. But if you're in your 20s or even your early 30s, some of the stuff must sound bizarre. The idea that a literal child could be on the cover of the biggest publication in sports in the world and called the chosen one. And somehow they undershot how good he was.
Starting point is 00:02:53 When you have that kind of career and a career that spans not only excellence on the court, but also Daly and's sense. in entertainment, dalliances in entrepreneurship and ownership, and then, of course, social activism, all of those things connecting. It's kind of amazing when you think of impossible hype, exceeded every expectation, also not enough. That's a hard one to pull off. And it's still happening. That's the intriguing part.
Starting point is 00:03:20 It's not like we're telling some story that we know how it wraps up. Which means this shouldn't be a limited series. We should have a season two. All that's going, right? Unlimited series. So let's go. The unlimited series. And for each episode of this unlimited series,
Starting point is 00:03:32 I'm going to give you guys, and this is maybe where you wanted to keep it limited homework. Okay, you're going to get some homework. The audience is going to get some homework. And then we'll talk about it. Ruin did. We'll have actual experts, not just us, even though I think of Meen might be the most expert of all of us,
Starting point is 00:03:46 who made those moments actually happen. They're going to be with us and take us back through time. I'm more of a LeBron expert than you are. I'm more. We'll do a scorecard at the end. Look at the corner, the very bottom right-hand corner there, and it tells you the AOL keyword search for Sports Illustrated.
Starting point is 00:04:13 That's the equivalent of today you getting a book or a magazine and it telling you what to Google to find the magazine. It's like, that's kind of odd. But back then, when this article came out, 3.2 million issues a week. I mean, that's ridiculous. It's about a third of that now. Do you remember it?
Starting point is 00:04:32 Do you like, where were you when it came out? I was, I think, working for the, Atlanta Hawks part-time. You worked for the Hawks? Yeah. I did not know that. It was a part-time job. At that time, I was doing, like, game operations,
Starting point is 00:04:45 which is a little contest that they do in the arena. And at the same time, I have a cousin who is roughly the same age as LeBron. And had played against him, I think, in IS8 or one of those high school tournaments. And wasn't impressed. That was my favorite. Of course. I was like, he's all right. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:04 I was covering the Miami Heat at the time, I believe, for the Palm Beach Post. It was just before I got to the Miami Herald. And this concept of, oh, this magazine is going to tell me who the future is. So I do remember something else from that cover. I remember thinking, they said the same thing about Felipe Lopez. Exactly. Felipe Lopez, growing up in New York, Felipe Lopez was God. No, it's the same thing.
Starting point is 00:05:28 It wasn't the same picture of Felipe Lopez, but it was the same sort of joy for basketball that they were putting on their cover. You won't believe this kid that's going to St. John's. He's better than anyone who's ever done it. Yes. And it was actually lampooned. I don't know what the exact word is. But Spike Lee and he got game, did the same thing in the fictional universe.
Starting point is 00:05:48 Jesus Shuttlesworth was on the cover of Sports Illustrated. But that was kind of an ode to Felipe Lopez, who had that kind of mythical reputation at the time. And so when LeBron James comes on the cover, it was two things. One is like, okay, here we go again. And second of all, you're telling me that the greatest player of the next generation is in Ohio. No chance. Well, but Izzy, here's the thing, though.
Starting point is 00:06:12 I'm not kidding you when I tell you of this cover and Sports Illustrated made me gun shy in this regard. I thought of Sid Finch. The character that Sports Illustrated fictionalized as someone who threw 140 miles an hour with a single boot on one leg and you never saw his foot. And the first 23 letters of the article spelled out Happy April Fool's Day. like the first word. Like I thought, I'm looking at this magazine, like, what do you mean someone from Ohio as a junior is going to declare for the draft as a junior
Starting point is 00:06:44 and you're going to tell me this person is as good as Michael Jordan? And then just to look at it in retrospect and be like, wait a minute, not only was it not fiction, it was all right and true. Yeah, and that's what got me about this one in particular because we were already in an era where people were telling you, be careful who you compare these high school players to,
Starting point is 00:07:03 Harold Minor came out as baby Jordan. Shake Cotton. Oh, from California. Cotton was on Sports Illustrated. Those California people still talk about them with baited breath. And so it just makes you wonder how did everybody know? Because when you read these quotes, when you listen to what they said about him in the past, they know. It was 100%.
Starting point is 00:07:24 They're saying this guy is going to be it. Danny Aange was quoted as saying, we would draft him number one right now as a junior. I like Jay Williams. I like that Chinese guy over there. He didn't even say his name, Yao Ming, but I would draft this guy first. My mentor, David Griffin, at the time, he was working his way up to the Sun's front office,
Starting point is 00:07:44 and he ran into Danny Aange, going to a game to watch LeBron James, and he said, Danny literally five minutes in the game, closes notebook, gets him right, we're leaving because they carpooled together, and Griffith's saying, what do you mean? The game just started.
Starting point is 00:07:59 He's like, name me five guys that you wouldn't trade right now for the right to have that kid. And he was a junior in high school at the time. And again, the crazy thing isn't that they were right. Everyone was right. Actually, we were wrong. We undersold how good the guy was. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:15 He lived up to every single expectation and surpassed it by a lot. It's crazy to think of someone exceeding expectations when the headline is the chosen one. And he's a junior in high school and he's 17 years old. Now, Izzy remind me, I had this cover. come out before or after the ABCD Camp showdown with Lenny Cook? After. Because to me, that was the first time I remember hearing about it. Ron James is simply the greatest 15, 16-year-old kid I've ever seen in my life.
Starting point is 00:08:45 That's the moment where he became a national phenomenon. He has a chance when it's all over to one of the greatest players ever to play the game. That's what sort of was the motivation for the article. Got it, right. So for those that don't know, the best, high school players in the country every summer would gather in Teaneck, New Jersey. And no one knew who LeBron James was. Everyone knew Lenny Cook.
Starting point is 00:09:07 He was the best player in the country. And the camp always ends with an All-Star game. And LeBron basically destroyed Lenny Cook. And Lenny Cook's career in life took a downward spiral. And LeBron became this huge platform and I guess culminating with this magazine cover. But that was the first time I remember hearing about him. His whole life changed after this magazine article because he was, no matter how famous he was in Akron, he was still a 17-year-old that was not known nationally. And he has this magazine cover tattooed on his back, correct?
Starting point is 00:09:42 He has chosen one tattooed on his back, and it's the numeral one, not the spelling of the new one. But that came from Grant Wall, our friend Grant Wall, wrote this article, the late Grant Wall, and the chosen one. He didn't become the chosen one until it was on this headline on this magazine. but also beyond that, when you talk about the power of the magazine at the time and the ridiculousness of three million people in America learning who you are, this picture is something that introduced us to 20 years of basketball after that. And the conversation around this at the time was, should you put a 17-year-old on the cover of a magazine, is that irresponsible because he's not a professional? I just want to come here and play hard. It really doesn't matter if I'm the best friend.
Starting point is 00:10:28 the camp, you know, I still know what I can do. So that is a great turning point here because another person who saw LeBron James there at that ABCD camp was Grant Wall. He pitched this story to his SI editors. And it was that concern that Dan just mentioned. It was, hey, how can we put this much pressure on this young gentleman? And we actually talked to one of them, Greg Kelly. And he talked about how they were reluctant.
Starting point is 00:10:56 at first to even do the story and certainly to put it on the cover. You know, we'd had some bad experiences in the past with putting Felipe Lopez on the cover before he'd ever played a game, and his career didn't work out all that great. And so Grant talked his editors into doing it. He ended up not only doing the story, but getting it put on the cover. I'm guessing it must have been a bit of a slow news week. That's probably the first week of the Olympics, which is, There's not that much going on.
Starting point is 00:11:28 So I think, yeah, I think a good high school basketball phenom was better than snowboarders. You know, we were kind of looking for the next Michael Jordan. You know, the kicker to the story was that LeBron had a mocked up cover of Sports Illustrated himself that said, is he the next Michael Jordan? You know, in retrospect, I think it was just something out of my Catholic upbringing that this was the second coming. And so he's the chosen one. more that than Star Wars or something. I never anticipated he would have it tattooed across his back
Starting point is 00:12:01 and, I don't know, 44 point type. All right, there's a bunch of movie references. I'm about to unload on all you guys. Number one, Anakin Skywalker was the chosen one. You must see it. Clouded this boy's future is. It was prophecy this guy would come along and bring balance to the force.
Starting point is 00:12:21 I'm going to trust you on this. Number two, he's not wrong about the search for the next Michael Jordan. You guys remember searching for Bobby Fisher, right? That movie. And it was about like, who's going to be the next great chess phenom? And it turns out to be some kid or whatever. Look, starting to 93, the idea that, okay, who's going to be next?
Starting point is 00:12:37 Because Jordan has retired. And Grant Hill for a little bit and Penny Hardaway for a little bit. And Kobe Bryant for a little bit. And Tracy McGrady. And there were all of these guys that everyone got hyped up. Like, okay, here we go. Vince Carter. This is the next Michael Jordan.
Starting point is 00:12:51 And none of them quite lived up to that. moniker, right? And then the third movie reference, and you guys are going to love this one, right? When he talks about his Catholic upbringing made me think of, he got game. It was Ray Allen at Jesus Shuttle's worth with a crown of thorns and a crucifix. I do remember that, yes. Dan, you saw a young A-rod, right, in high school. Did you have those kind of vibes seen? No, no. That was not anything like what this was, even though everyone knew he'd be good because of the body type, languid, the swing. I just don't know how you do these measurements. in basketball.
Starting point is 00:13:26 Like I'm, Amin is somebody who studies, measures how good these people are. There has never been anybody that's not seven foot four that you can make this kind of projection on it, 17 years old. Can you guys imagine when he asked me about A-Rod? Just imagine,
Starting point is 00:13:44 because I did see that, and it became obvious. Like, he got to the big leagues at 19 or 20 or whatever and looked like a grown man physically. But imagine the absurdity of putting on the cover a 17-year-old baseball player and saying, The Next Bay Brew. One of the things that you guys said
Starting point is 00:13:59 that was interesting about this article, it really does feel like Grantland Rice, the original famous sports writer who wrote about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. It feels like you are looking at LeBron James' life through the eyes of an old-timey
Starting point is 00:14:16 reporter from another time right before the entire machine changes everything. Like, that you're getting a glimpse of while he's meeting Michael Jordan in the opening paragraph of the story, this is how the torch gets passed and we can all watch it right before everything
Starting point is 00:14:32 changes before our eyes over the net. Like, the coolest thing about this article is that during a slow news time, they got everything right by just taking the high school kid and saying, we shouldn't go with a snowboarder this way. Well, this article begins with an exchange between Michael Jordan and LeBron James.
Starting point is 00:14:50 But Grant compared that to the photo, if people remember, of JFK, shaking hands with a young Bill Clinton. Yeah. And how prescient it seemed to be, like this man is the next coming, will lead, whether it be NBA or the country. I thought that that was so perfect. When you see Michael Jordan come up to the 17-year-old and say, hey, how's mom? And you see that Michael Jordan clearly, for whatever reason, is giving this guy attention and believes in whatever he is.
Starting point is 00:15:20 I've written a ton of stories. I've never had a lead just show up. to me just like that so perfectly. Well, it is, you know, some form as ridiculous as I may sound saying this, there is an an anointing in game recognizing game because it should be LeBron being awed to be in the presence of Michael Jordan. Like through the prism, Grant Wall as a metal art colleague being at the very start of his career, very start of his career, an accomplished career, to be watching what is the future,
Starting point is 00:15:47 what you now can see as the future unfolding before it has actually happened, that is a a cool part of the story to see. And the scene that Grant Wall is setting for you is like, oh, look, the king, Michael, is paying his respect to something he sees that is that obvious. And that king is used to genuflecting at every turn from others. So the idea that the lead of this story is, how are these two being treated as peers? This is why I'm telling you that when I read it, I thought it was the Sid Finch article. because I'm like, this is a moment that a writer is witnessing that he is making into a moment that it's not allowed to be.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Cool note from the actual exchange that they had. That was, of course, Washington Wizard, Michael Jordan. And he had just hit a game winner against the Cleveland Cavalier. Here we go, and one in six tenth seconds left. Wizards need the bucket to the wind. Jordan the jumper. Those guys in that car with Grant Wall on the way to that Wizards game. in a one-hour car ride with LeBron and his friends.
Starting point is 00:16:59 You know, LeBron is sitting there with the ox. You know, he's playing Jay-Z. This is just the last look that you get at LeBron before his life totally changes because he's riding around with a writer who would be granted this access by a 17-year-old kid who just wants to be a little bit cool. And here's the other part.
Starting point is 00:17:19 He's excited about the idea that he's going to be on the SI cover. Well, there's a quick story about how he got this, cover, which I think is kind of very LeBron. We actually spoke to a guy who shot the cover. His name was Mike LeBrek. And LeBron's mother, Gloria, was involved in this too, because Mike was shooting some other players at this ABCD camp,
Starting point is 00:17:40 and Gloria just started asking him questions. His mom mentioned to me what you got going on over here. I was like, I'm taking pictures of the kids as they come off. And she goes, oh, you got to get my son. I'm like, I will bring him on, you know? So Gloria brought LeBron over to me. and we did some shots. Fast forward after that whole weekend,
Starting point is 00:18:01 I brought the film back to Sports Illustrated. And eventually they said, hey, okay, you can shoot LeBron. And they went and shot LeBron at St. Vincent's St. Mary's in their locker room. I mean, this kid rolled in 8 o'clock in the morning. I also set up a black piece of cloth on the wall. And that's where he was posing. That wind up being the cover shot there. But he went to a Catholic school, as we all know,
Starting point is 00:18:25 and they had like a cathedral. And I did shots of him with the stained glass behind him. And then I also did shots of him dunking. I had him dunk literally. And I feel guilty about this now. It's a young kid. Literally, almost 30 times. And he did have practice later on that day.
Starting point is 00:18:42 He'd have 10 more years if he hadn't dunk 30 times that day, 25 years ago. Did you think that this would be the cover that came out of everything that he just described? The stained glass, I thought would have been the one, right? That would have been the one. But in retrospect, this is such a great shot. And, you know, he also talks about choosing the color of the ball, choosing that color because he thought it would pop more. And it's so funny because I never thought about what color of the ball was.
Starting point is 00:19:07 If you had asked me, hey, what color was the ball that was on the cover of Sports Illustrated for that LeBron cover? Couldn't tell you. It didn't stand out. The idea that that guy made LeBron James dunk 30 times in a gym when LeBron James was 17. years old and that now he would still be taking alley-oops from half-court in the league. I don't know what you guys think is the craziest part of this story.
Starting point is 00:19:33 There are many crazy parts. But the fact that he is still doing it, averaging 20 plus points a game, like it's up there. Yes, it's up there a little bit behind. He has a child who's also in the NBA. That too. He's better than that child, by the way. You talk about Barry Bonds and Bobby Bonds. You can talk about Ken Griffey.
Starting point is 00:19:51 like the fact that like oh dad is still way better way better than that I hadn't even thought of that like on highly questionable we talked to so many athletes about when it is that they stop playing their son their teenage sons and they're like yeah the first time he beat me we never played again the idea that brawny's in the NBA and still can't beat his dad lauraun's never going to have to quit against brawny
Starting point is 00:20:18 LeBron's going to be 54 years old, grandfather to Brani's children and still busting his son's ass. Hey, Sonny, can you hear me now? Yes, I can. I can hear it. Now we can hear you too. How are you, sir?
Starting point is 00:20:48 I'm fine. Thank you. Awesome. You hear it. Me, Israel. We have Amin Al-Hassin and Dan Levitart. Okay. I'm sunny.
Starting point is 00:20:56 There's been a long time, Dan, since we had talked. That's for sure. And this is an interesting chapter. after in all of our lives, right? Who thought all those years were to pass? And here we are. And he's still gone. It's amazing. And now we're joined by a legend of the shoe game, Sonny Vicaro. He was at Nike, where he signed Michael Jordan. You might remember seeing Matt Damon play him in the movie Air. He was at Adidas where he almost landed LeBron James. He was also at Reebok. He's the author of Legends
Starting point is 00:21:26 and Souls, the memoir of an American original. That's Sol's S-O-L-E-S, of course. Sunny, Thank you for talking to us here. Sonny, there's a scene in your book from the famed ABCD Gamp in the summer of 2001, where you see LeBron change out of these oversized shorts that seemed to be slowing him down. That happened just like that. His coach, who was coaching his high school coach at that time, told him he had a tight-nosed pants up. You know, we got a guy watching you up there interested in giving you a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:21:56 That happened. You watched him for 15 minutes, and then you knew immediately that you wanted to sign him to a lifetime deal to Adidas. And then you got on a plane and it was a thunderstorm and you thought to yourself, oh my God, I just saw the greatest high school player I've ever seen and I'm not going to be able to live to tell about it. I did say that. Worst playing right Pam and I ever had. It will never leave my psyche as long as I ever mind. That's for sure. I'm going to read a quote from you in the SI story where you said this is going to be like a Shakespearean drama. Basically only two people are involved. Me or Michael, Adidas or Nike. What else was there?
Starting point is 00:22:32 in terms of the recruiting other than just the dollar amount? I followed them. I didn't miss a game if it were. There was one game where Phil Knight showed up, too, to sit on the other side of the floor in Los Angeles. So it got to be the personal recruiting of LeBron James. I was closer to the family than anyone that sometimes they changed history or people for it. And that's fine.
Starting point is 00:22:56 But you can't take away the time I spent with Gloria and Eddie. I mean, they were to my home. Just to clarify, Eddie Jackson is the father figure that LeBron grew up with that you're speaking of there. Eddie was, you know, in his world that he lived in. He was a little bit different, you know, but he was the guy that was running the show at that time. We could have forced him to do anything. I would have held my honor with these players, and I'm not trying to be nice to your public listening guys. It's just true. I never lied. You know, what the hell is good a line, though kid, and then I'm going to have to lie to another guy. So I believe that he would have gone over it. I don't know if it would have been a bidding contest or whatever,
Starting point is 00:23:38 or we would just shut it down. I don't know what I did this would have done. But we never had a chance to do it. What do you remember about when this SI cover came out? Did it actually, like, drive up LeBron's price and negotiations there? Nothing could have driven it up, but what it did was a stable, exactly what the public had heard about, because at that time, Sports Illustrated cover was one of the most important things.
Starting point is 00:24:01 you could do if you were an athlete. So let's put it that way. They're no longer that in that situation. But yes, it meant a lot because everybody in the nation saw it and you know, and I'm fortunate enough to have an autograph copy of that thing from LeBron. I mean, so I go way back getting that in the mail and all that. But that led him. That was his opening to America, yes. Sonny, I just really don't understand how it is that it can be that obvious to you upon sight that a 17-year-old is going to be that much better than everyone else. You have a lifetime of experience evaluating these people. You know how subjective and scientific it can be and can't be. How is it possible at 17 that you would be that clear-eyed
Starting point is 00:24:47 about seeing this? I can't explain that, but it's obviously something to it, inside of my mind, inside of my memory. The Jordan thing was the most fantastic thing that I ever can go back to, I saw them for 17 seconds. Now, you can transfer this to Kobe, to LeBron, you know, to Tracy. None of these guys had I ever seen before I made that decision. I knew on all of them. But LeBron was the easiest. Anybody else can see it once they had the opportunity. I had this great chance to do it first. I'm sure other people would have said the same thing. No one would have been as dramatic as me, gentlemen. But there is no question to my mind that, you know, at that time when I saw him to make his
Starting point is 00:25:33 decision, there was no holding back because after that is when I offered them the $100 million in their hotel room in Los Angeles that I knew that Adidas promised me they were going to thing. So I knew it when I left that gym in 20 minutes. And for anyone just like thinking who in hell, Sonny Bakaro, the only thing I can say, not in my defense, but in the reality of life, I've done it before. For those who don't know, just Sonny Vaccaro, beyond being just a legend, he's also a mafioso. I mean it with the greatest of compliments.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Figuratively. Yes, a figurative mafioso, a gangster who runs over the sneaker game. I want the details, Sonny. Give us the details that put us in that room of sneaker gangster, Sunny Vicaro, saying, I know who to give $100 million because I'm a gangster. I'll never forget that room. We drove up after a high school game. I think Ohio State was playing a football game that day, so we had to make the football
Starting point is 00:26:33 game. It was Gloria and LeBron. Mavre wasn't in it. No other people were in it. And I had assurance by Adidas that they were going to back my play. They knew I was going to do it. I didn't just make it up that day. I told them, we're going to give him the biggest contract ever given.
Starting point is 00:26:49 And they said, yes, you can. So when I went there, I was prepared. I wasn't nervous. I wasn't whatever. And the first thing I asked was, what do you think you're worth? LeBron sort of said it. Maybe around $5 million. They had a couple of other ones who went close.
Starting point is 00:27:05 And I said, no, I'm going to offer you $100 million. LeBron jumped, Gloria cried. So to go back to the mafia, I take it in a strange world that you put that as a compliment, but not as I meant it. I didn't have a slitjammer ready to go to hit him or I didn't have a gun. I meant it as a compliment. You know you're a gangster. I agree. We all know you're a gangster.
Starting point is 00:27:27 Look, this is a different time in the sneaker game. It doesn't sound sane that Adidas okayed you. Yeah, go give a high school kid $100 million. What if I told you? That's what Phil Knight told me about Michael. I'll say this for the record. When I was doing all the players I ever worked, all the companies I ever worked for,
Starting point is 00:27:47 going back to Sean Livingston, the sign would Reebok and then got hired. All the people, it was my number. It was never their number. the number Michael came up because that was our budget. But I said, give it all. Give it all. So this is the first time someone asked me something like that.
Starting point is 00:28:05 So I think it's a great compliment to, you know, whatever I was able to do. But they also gave me permission. I didn't do this by, you know, just and then tricking them. I did just, I said, this is what I'm doing. That's why I quit. Sonny, did you ever get any clarification why they changed their mind? Because in your book, it says, you didn't know that the number had changed until right then in the meeting with Gloria and LeBron. I never asked him what the hell they did.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Wow. I was gone. They lied to me because we knew, and everyone in that room that gave me that contract knew what was supposed to be in there. That's what I'm saying. They lied. And they lied to me to lie to this kid. I didn't say that we'd get Nike. Nike's still going to make a bid.
Starting point is 00:28:50 There's no question. I doubt Phil Knight would have given up. I think he'd have gave him more than $100 million, to be honest with you. He couldn't afford to lose LeBron James. Let's be honest. I had Kobe and Tracy and Jermaine, O'Neill. I mean, Jermaine would have pretty damn good player too. I got out of high school.
Starting point is 00:29:05 Adidas signs LeBron. The game's over. Just be logical if we end up, those four names that I just gave you are iconic. Tracy's a first edition when he's in the Hall of Fame coming from nowhere. Kobe's destiny was, you know, made the day he come from Italy with his family. I mean, these guys are legend, legends also. And then you got this kid and you have them throughout and who knows what else happens. I mean, so no matter what people come back and they'll have an answer for what I'm saying,
Starting point is 00:29:41 because you can't play out the cards. I didn't get them. But if they did happen, I just want to find somebody better than you know, LeBron and Kobe and Tracy at that young age. I know we're on a clock, so, but that's what I'm saying. Who can tell, but if we got them. I'm not worried about the clock. I am worried about that magazine that's signed.
Starting point is 00:30:03 You got to get that thing in a protective cover. You can't just leave that in open air. I also have the ACE of Spades that Michael gave me on the 10-hour ride from Paris to back to Chicago when he paid me to debt because I won. You beat Michael at gambling and cards or something else? What's the debt that he owed you? you. We play gin for 10 hours, stopped to go to the bathroom dinner, and I'd be him. I won more. We were playing for a big number. Once it read a certain number, we quit keeping score.
Starting point is 00:30:32 And honest to God, we were landing in Chicago, and that's what he said. When the plane hit down, it would be the last hand. And the last hand came, I won. So instead of him give me the X dollars, he knows me. Oh, that's bullshit. Wait a minute. That's bullshit. Like, how much money did he owe you? I'll tell you what, I swear to God Almighty. It was a Thai game. He told me the one, whatever we were playing for the games. It was more than a dollar. But he gave me the Asian Spades.
Starting point is 00:31:00 It was the Ace of Spades. And I got that Asia Spades locked up too. A man who could offer $100 million in a hotel room to a 17-year-old gambled with one of the most famous and exorbitantly lavish gamblers there's ever been. You beat him for a sum of months. which was blank. Blank, you're right. Whatever it was, it's better
Starting point is 00:31:26 being a mystery, but he gave me the card, that's what's great. Well, get that card to praise and see how much that thing is worth. It's not great, Sonny. The card's not worth whatever you would have won playing gym for 10 hours with Michael Jordan. I don't know. I don't know. I kind of feel like the card won't be worth more. It's bullshit.
Starting point is 00:31:42 You're saying you've got a card that's priceless, and I'm saying there was a price and you won't tell us what it is. I'm not going to either. You're full of shit, Vaccaro. See, doesn't that make it more valuable if I don't tell anybody anything? The book is Legends and Souls, the memoir of an American original. Sonny Vaccaro, thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:32:01 Thank you, Sonny. We're going to go one-on-one off the record someday. Thank you, Sonny. Good seeing you. Thanks, Eddie. God bless you. Thank you all. One of the things about this article, I don't know if you guys notice this, maybe Izzy reads this way,
Starting point is 00:32:32 read writing as a writer. So I see the places here where Grant Wall is a bit primitive as a writer because this is a young Grant Wall doing his story on a young LeBron James, who also hasn't actually lived all that much yet because he's 17 years old. So this feels like an article that could have been written in a high school newspaper in some ways by two very talented people who happened to be in high school. Give me an example. A specific example. Oh, it's just, Grant Wall was an exceptional writer. And this was like a bit Spartan. He's not doing a lot of flowery here. He's just talking about he's taking a snapshot of a high school.
Starting point is 00:33:09 Grant Wall, by the end of his career, was a great writer. He was not yet a great writer when he wrote this story. This is a snapshot of LeBron as a 17-year-old, Grant Wall as a young writer. He was 28, so he wasn't. But young in his career, though, yes. Yes. There was a line where he mentioned that he had, quote,
Starting point is 00:33:25 an Iversonian street cred that Jordan himself lacked. Was he right at the time? So that was the conjecture. at the time, the idea that Jordan, corporate, Iverson, the people's champ, right? Like he had the streets on lot. And that was described as street credit, which we see now, I was like, oh, that's not a great reference street cred, right? But I would say at the time, irrespective of Grant's evolution as a writer, that's
Starting point is 00:33:54 how people talk, man, about our sport. This wasn't like, oh, look at this guy writing like this. Everybody wrote like this, this article, this cover that we have here from him as a high school junior was both ridiculous standard setting and at the same time, in retrospect, very sober and conservative from what he actually became. I would say conservative in another way, too, because some of the framing of this, no biological father, aggregated cocaine trafficking, like blasting Jay-Z in the in the car. and also using his two-way pager. Yeah. Dan, I wanted to ask you about sort of this idea of LeBron not really wanting to tell his history, right? Not really wanting to use his overcoming of his childhood, if you will, not necessarily ignoring it,
Starting point is 00:34:48 but just, hey, I don't need that to be discussed when it comes to why I made it. If he were to talk about whatever the poverty porn was in his life that actually shaped him, when he says tangentially here I saw a lot of drugs and crime, but I'm not talking about the cliched stuff. I'm talking about the details to his story that he has never told about how he was shaped
Starting point is 00:35:09 and how it is that Grant Wall would arrive at LeBron James' street credibility. Like LeBron James does not present as Alan Iverson's story on street credibility. Grant Wall is arriving at LeBron James' life and seeing an assortment of things that come from poverty and see LeBron rising above it,
Starting point is 00:35:31 whatever the difficulties are in having a single mom and chaos in your life that makes you miss 100 days of fourth grade classes because you're moving around from apartment to apartment. One of the things to that is, and I did not know this until rereading this article years and years later,
Starting point is 00:35:49 is that LeBron's grandmother passed away only a couple of years after he was born. So typically what we see is when you have young parents, their parents have a very, pivotal role in the raising of the child. Well, here's Gloria James at 18 years old, alone in the world. But I go back to defend Grant Wall on this
Starting point is 00:36:09 as a 17-year-old, and this is the backstory. That is the archetype that everyone was operating off of. The NBA has become a middle-class sport. Basketball has become a middle-class sport. All these kids come from middle-class homes. But at this point in time, the early 2000s, The archetype of the NBA player is, has to struggle to make it, whatever.
Starting point is 00:36:31 And the guys who don't fit that archetype are few and far between. And you know who one of those guys is? Michael Jordan, who came from a middle-class family. Kobe Bryant. Kobe Bryant came from an affluent family, right? But Michael Jordan, who's the comp, right? Jordan's two-parent household.
Starting point is 00:36:47 Parents were professionals, educated, decidedly middle-class. Alan Iverson, single mother. Island Iverson growing up in a very rough part of Virginia. Island Iverson surrounding himself, like LeBron, with friends. These consigniaries that I have cost to my family and carrying them along with me throughout. Is it just him wanting to shape his story however he wants it told? Is there a level of embarrassment that he does not address?
Starting point is 00:37:16 Now I think there is what he wants his Horatio-Alger story to be about. doesn't want it to be about that particular thing. I found it interesting though. Buzz Bissiger and a whole lot of great writers have tried to make their way into the details of this and no one's actually achieved it. Like I'm actually interested in the journey that goes from, oh, that person's proud of being from the street, proud of representing the street. LeBron has never done that. I wouldn't go as far as he doesn't have pride in it. I do think to myself where he has wanted to be and has arrived as a business mogul in those
Starting point is 00:37:55 boardrooms, in those interactions what gives me credibility if they see me as a guy from the street or if they see me as a peer in this. And so it's a difference in Alan Iverson's friends being called a posse and LeBron James' friends being business moguls in their own rights.
Starting point is 00:38:11 But it's purposeful though. This is what I'm saying. That's my point. This part's hugely interesting. It serves him and his economy to scrub as much of the street off of him in sales. I don't know if it's right. And just say Akron. Just make it Akron instead of make it street credibility, which is what make the story.
Starting point is 00:38:30 When he's talking about Horatio Alger and how do you clean this up to make it palatable to America, just make it he loves Akron. LeBron transcends street credibility, which is a pretty strong credibility to have. I think he graduated from the street. Yeah. I mean, the kid from Akron in itself is trademarked. Like that's, that just shows you it's about business. but he is shaping the story, however he wants you to see it.
Starting point is 00:38:54 But he didn't leave it behind, right? Through the school, through his various philanthropic efforts and his standing up for social causes, he hasn't left it behind. And it goes back to the very first paragraph of this story. Who was his role model, the guy he wanted to be, was Michael Jordan. And Michael Jordan was corporate excellence.
Starting point is 00:39:14 That's what he was. Michael Jordan commanded and demanded respect in any boardroom, any golf course, anywhere he went. No one talked about him being a country boy from Wilmington, North Carolina. They talked about Michael Jordan as being this almost like an avatar for business dominance. Okay, but what I'm talking about, though, I mean here, like when you say he didn't leave it behind, I believe he did leave it behind. And it doesn't mean that he neglects Akron, because he doesn't, obviously. I'm saying he polished it into something different so that whomever would be put off by
Starting point is 00:39:50 street credibility. Yes. Whomever that Stephen Jackson and Matt Barnes and Alan Iverson put off with the coolness of street credibility. He didn't do Republicans buy shoes too, but he did put street credibility
Starting point is 00:40:04 over there, wrap it and Akron in schools and make it something that works in sales. Like it's brilliant as an economic model. There are hundreds of thousands of people come from disadvantaged backgrounds who end up getting opportunities and
Starting point is 00:40:19 and privileges to go to a certain, maybe you got to go to a certain high school, and as a result, you got to go to a certain university, and you graduate, and when you walk into a room as a graduate of an Ivy League institution, right? It's not necessarily a disavowing or a distancing. It is what Izzy said, it is a graduation. Yeah, I went, I was there in my proverbial middle school of life.
Starting point is 00:40:44 As did Maverick Carter? Yes, as did Rich Paul? As did Rich Paul. Right? And they all benefited. from this in that when they walk into a room, Dan, business people, particularly white business people, don't look at them as some guys, some riffraff, some whatever. They look at them as peers.
Starting point is 00:41:01 And that starts with how you tell my story. If you constantly tell my story as one of poverty and drugs and crime and all that stuff, then it's always the prism in which these boardrooms and these business people are always going to look at me through. Do you not think it's interesting, though, Izzy, that for all the powers that this human being has shown to have over the years that he gets to control that part of the story? Like, I thought that we were people who were allowed to tell all the parts of the story and revisiting his past in something other than Akron schools.
Starting point is 00:41:36 How many people are actually going to go back and read the story? No, right. No, we've wasted. No, no. We've wasted how much time today talking about a story that nobody has thought about for 20-plus years. So I got a little bit of homework for you guys. I want you to watch an 11-minute video. I think you know which one it is.
Starting point is 00:41:53 The answer to the question everybody wants to know. LeBron, what's your decision? It's a book club. Why is it a video? I thought you guys were going to make fun of me about the fact that I thought this actual magazine entire cover was what was tattooed on his back. I didn't think it was just the chosen one.
Starting point is 00:42:12 I'm sorry, I'm embarrassed by it. I took no joy from admitting that to you guys. I just now delight in. the idea of this entire cover being on LeBron James' back. Like, what a terrible idea that would be, and yet somehow not as bad as the one not fitting on his back because the tattoo artist stinks. Including the price of the magazine
Starting point is 00:42:32 and the AOL keyword Sports Illustrated.

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