At wide receiver, LeBron James

robjgrif

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Face Cleveland, commercial or not, his a Cowboys Fan!


At wide receiver, LeBrown James

By TOM WITHERS, AP Sports Writer




CLEVELAND (AP)—LeBron James once dreamed of playing in the NFL. He did for 30 seconds.
In a television commercial debuting Sunday for State Farm Insurance, James, a former star wide receiver in high school, suits up for the Cleveland Browns.
A die-hard Dallas Cowboys fan, James wears a brown No. 23 Browns jersey with “LeBron” on the back. The spot was recently shot at the University of Akron’s indoor training facility and will be shown will during Sunday’s AFC and NFC championship games.
This will be the second commercial James has done with State Farm, which signed him to a sponsorship last year hoping he could help the company attract young adult policyholders.
“He is one of the few sports stars who transcends his sport as a pop culture icon,” said State Farm’s Mark Gibson, an assistant vice president of advertising. “He has helped connect people to State Farm who may not have been connected with us.”

James also has done public service announcements and appearances for the insurance provider.
At 6-foot-8 and 250 pounds, James often describes himself as a football player. He was an All-Ohio selection at Akron’s St. Vincent-St. Mary High School and still plays flag football at the school during the offseason.
James said he had input into the commercial, which shows using some of his basketball skills to help the Browns on the football field.
“I chose what team I wanted to wear, what I wanted to do and which routes I wanted to run,” he said.
James has been criticized by Cleveland fans for supporting the Cowboys and New York Yankees. He triggered a public outcry when he wore a Yankees cap to an Indians playoff game two years ago and again to a Browns home game against Dallas last season .
So was it tough pulling on an orange Browns helmet and not one with a star on it?
“No,” James said with a wink. “I love the Browns.”
 

hendog

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Put LJ at WR and Shaq at left tackle and we're all set.
 

tomson75

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Texan_Eph89;2583209 said:
Basically he could be the Fitz of tight ends....
He's too slow for WR.

At that size, he's not too slow for anything.
 

hendog

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Texan_Eph89;2583209 said:
Basically he could be the Fitz of tight ends....
He's too slow for WR.

I don't know what his 40 time would be but he's anything but slow. Do you think Amani Toomer or Mushin Mohammed could out run Lebron?
 

SLATEmosphere

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Texan_Eph89;2583209 said:
Basically he could be the Fitz of tight ends....
He's too slow for WR.


Slow? He was clocked at having a 4.5 in highschool.

And have you seen him play? the guy just blows by everyone in the open court.
 

Texan_Eph89

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What happened to that huge Arkansas QB that was huge, a playmaker, and a 4.3 runner in Jacksonville?

Oh yeah, his physical abilities didn't matter much did they?

Lebron is a great BB player, but just bc. he played in HS soedn't mean he would make a great FB player in the NFL.

There are plenty of Athletic freaks out there, but very few become successful FB players.

Let's remember Bob Hayes is the exception of OLYMPIC RUNNERS!
Most fail. He is more built to play tight end. I doubt he could get much separation. Zone would render him more or less useless.
 

tomson75

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Texan_Eph89;2583238 said:
What happened to that huge Arkansas QB that was huge, a playmaker, and a 4.3 runner in Jacksonville?

Oh yeah, his physical abilities didn't matter much did they?

Lebron is a great BB player, but just bc. he played in HS soedn't mean he would make a great FB player in the NFL.

There are plenty of Athletic freaks out there, but very few become successful FB players.

Let's remember Bob Hayes is the exception of OLYMPIC RUNNERS!
Most fail. He is more built to play tight end. I doubt he could get much separation. Zone would render him more or less useless.

You said he was too slow to play wide receiver. No one said he is automatically a NFL caliber WR....even though the fact that he was an outstanding WR in high school suggest he could be. He wouldn't even need seperation. He's 6 foot friggen 8. He could stand still and catch balls over NFL CB's.

What exactly are you arguing?
 

jobberone

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Texan_Eph89;2583209 said:
Basically he could be the Fitz of tight ends....
He's too slow for WR.

Are you kidding? He's faster than Irvin ever was by a good bit.
 

PBJTime

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SLATEmosphere;2583220 said:
Slow? He was clocked at having a 4.5 in highschool.

And have you seen him play? the guy just blows by everyone in the open court.

I watched him play against the Thunder a couple weeks ago. He is a man among boys. I never realized it until I saw him live.
 

Texan_Eph89

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tomson75;2583251 said:
You said he was too slow to play wide receiver. No one said he is automatically a NFL caliber WR....even though the fact that he was an outstanding WR in high school suggest he could be. He wouldn't even need seperation. He's 6 foot friggen 8. He could stand still and catch balls over NFL CB's.

What exactly are you arguing?

He is too slow for WR. Tight ends run 4.5s.
How many sucessful WR do you know that run a 4.5?

Sure, he could play catch all day.
1) We don't know if he is drop-prone
2)all you need to play with him is press
3)He would be in the coverage of LBs so we would have to take that in consideration.

He has the build of a TE. That's what I said.
I can't believe you're arguing so hard about something that would never happen.
 

hendog

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Texan_Eph89;2583238 said:
What happened to that huge Arkansas QB that was huge, a playmaker, and a 4.3 runner in Jacksonville?

Oh yeah, his physical abilities didn't matter much did they?

Lebron is a great BB player, but just bc. he played in HS soedn't mean he would make a great FB player in the NFL.

There are plenty of Athletic freaks out there, but very few become successful FB players.

Let's remember Bob Hayes is the exception of OLYMPIC RUNNERS!
Most fail. He is more built to play tight end. I doubt he could get much separation. Zone would render him more or less useless.

No one argued he would be a great wr in the NFL. The argument is/was that he is certainly faster and more athletic than alot of receivers on NFL teams.
 

Texan_Eph89

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jobberone;2583257 said:
Are you kidding? He's faster than Irvin ever was by a good bit.

Irvin played in the 90s, that's a big difference.

Since then, every football position has gotten faster.
 

hendog

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Texan_Eph89;2583269 said:
He is too slow for WR. Tight ends run 4.5s.
How many sucessful WR do you know that run a 4.5?

Sure, he could play catch all day.
1) We don't know if he is drop-prone
2)all you need to play with him is press
3)He would be in the coverage of LBs so we would have to take that in consideration.

He has the build of a TE. That's what I said.
I can't believe you're arguing so hard about something that would never happen.

I would say probably half of the WR's in the NFL run a 4.5.
 

Texan_Eph89

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hendog;2583270 said:
No one argued he would be a great wr in the NFL. The argument is/was that he is certainly faster and more athletic than alot of receivers on NFL teams.

And what I said is that he has the build of a TE.
A TE could play WR, but they would excel at TE.
Lebron in the endzone is death to a defense.
Lebron in short distance passing is death to a defense.

but Lebron deep down double covered against NFL caliber DBs is not as good of a matchup.
 

THUMPER

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We did draft Pat Riley back in the 60s. I always thought Karl Malone would have made a great TE.

IMO basketball players make the transition to football much easier than baseball players do.
 

hendog

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What constitutes successful? I'd say if you were one of the 200 (IDK- give or take) WR's in the NFL you'd be a success at it.
 

Texan_Eph89

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THUMPER;2583285 said:
We did draft Pat Riley back in the 60s. I always thought Karl Malone would have made a great TE.

IMO basketball players make the transition to football much easier than baseball players do.

I didn't argue that it would be impossible for him to make the move, I simply stated that he would make a better TE than a WR.
 
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