LeBron James Trolls Knicks Fans After Loss In The Conference Finals
In a special edition episode of the 'Mind the Game' podcast, Lakers star LeBron James trolled the Knicks after their recent run to the Conference Finals. James, who was joined by Maverick Carter, Victor Wembanyama, and other celebrity guests, spoke directly to Knicks fans as he looked back on the 2025 playoffs.
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'Knicks fans, y'all good? You going to the Finals next year? We'll see," said James.
The episode was being shot in New York City as part of Fanatics Fest 2025, which means LeBron knew there would be plenty of Knicks fans in attendance. Over the years, while LeBron has not engaged much with the Knicks, he has had several opportunities to join them over the years.
In 2010, the Knicks thought they had James in the bag until he revealed his intentions to sign with the Heat. Ever since, LeBron has kept a comfortable distance from the Knicks, a team that was considered highly dysfunctional and unorganized.
As an organization, the Knicks were the laughing stock of the league for years, and they had nothing to show for their existence but repeated playoff failures. All that changed with the arrival of Jalen Brunson in 2022. His elite play at point guard brought the Knicks to relevance in the East, and he found favor among the fans with averages of 28.7 points, 3.6 rebounds, and 6.7 assists per game on 47.9% shooting.
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By the 2024-25 campaign, the Knicks were one of the highest-rated teams in the East, and they successfully restored their reputation after decades of mismanagement. All along the way, Knicks fans were buzzing with excitement, and they were going viral as they proudly cheered their team to success.
While the Knicks did make a run to the East Finals this year, they fell short once again, and the fans experienced major disappointment. Even when everything was going their way, it still wasn't enough to win, and some fans are feeling a sense of hopelessness about their immediate title chances.
Today, LeBron brought all of those feelings back as he reminded New Yorkers of their most recent playoff losses. While LeBron didn't do much better with the Lakers, he can at least look back on his past titles as proof of his success.
For the Knicks, their only images of winning are in the future, but they cannot do it as presently constricted. With a few moves to the roster, namely the supporting cast, the Knicks can get even better as a team and increase their championship odds. Or, they can pursue star power to ensure they always have a go-to scorer in the clutch.
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Whatever happens in New York this summer, one thing is clear: LeBron James will not be a part of it. He's already made peace with not becoming a Knick, and he's better off with the Lakers anyway, a team that is fully equipped to maximize the end of his career.
To get revenge on LeBron will be no easy feat, but Knicks fans are eager for it after he so brutally called them out. In the end, only time will tell if they can earn LeBron's respect, but they've come a long way from where they were before, when they were in complete disarray as a franchise.
Related: Tom Brady Calls LeBron James 'The Greatest Ever' In Show Of Respect
This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jun 21, 2025, where it first appeared.
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Indianapolis Star
16 minutes ago
- Indianapolis Star
Indiana sports fans know championship defeats. Which loss hurt most?
Indiana sports fans know heartache all too well. There were Injuries to Peyton Manning, Paul George, Scott May, Victor Oladipo, Robbie Hummel... you get the idea. And then far too many near misses. Don't get us wrong, we've had our championship moments. The Colts won Super Bowl XLI. IU basketball has five banners — albeit dusty. The Pacers owned the ABA. Purdue and Notre Dame women's basketball teams have titles. The Fever won in 2012. Notre Dame football has 11 national titles, though none since 1988. But we've had more championship letdowns than most can bear. And last month's NBA Finals loss by the Pacers in Game 7 with their star player in agonizing pain brought a lot of those "Why always us?" sentiments. Here's a look back at some of state's hardest-to-swallow championship defeats, if you can stomach it. This was the Fever's first trip to the WNBA Finals and they were trying to win Indianapolis' first professional basketball championship since the 1973 ABA Pacers. The Fever had a 2-1 series lead in the best-of-5 series with a home game in Game 4, but behind Diana Taurasi, the Mercury rallied to win the next two games and the title. Indiana was within two points with a minute left, but got no closer. "We're really pissed off right now because we had a golden opportunity, and we let it slip in Indiana," Fever forward Ebony Hoffman said afterward. "It's emptiness," Fever guard Katie Douglas said after her 4-of-14 shooting night in the clincher. "There's not a better word for it." "This year has been amazing, being a part of this team," Tamika Catchings said. "The will we've had as a team, the drive, the motivation, the inspiration we've provided our city. We're going to back home and we're going back with our heads held high... this is not going to be the last time you're going to see us in the Finals." The Fever did return to the Finals, in 2012, and this time, left with the championship — the franchise's only to date. Notre Dame took a 7-0 lead, and things were looking good... until they weren't. The Buckeyes then blitzed the Irish, taking a 31-7 lead and that was that. "Can't we just celebrate that is almost happened at all?" IndyStar columnist Gregg Doyel wrote. "Can we just celebrate that Notre Dame football is back, and not back like it was under the previous coach, whatshisname -- the guy with the red, raging face and funny Southern accent -- but back, as in back? "... But this 2024 Notre Dame football team, this was the one that brought back the echoes. Knute, Touchdown Jesus, Rudy -- this was the season when it was OK to get misty-eyed over all that stuff again, because this was the season when you realized Notre Dame wasn't just back, but likeable." Notre Dame hasn't won a national title since 1988. This was No. 1 vs. No. 2. And it was no match. Both teams entered the title game undefeated, but Notre Dame had lost its star forward, Natalie Achonwa, to injury earlier in the NCAA tournament. It wouldn't have changed the outcome: UConn 79, Notre Dame 58. "It's hard right now to remember what a great season this was," Irish coach Muffet McGraw said. "I think that's what we need to reflect back and think about, getting here." "Losing was difficult, especially since it hadn't happened. But a 21-point thumping was really hard to process...," wrote South Bend Tribune's Al Lesar. "This loss is going to sting a while as well it should. A 37-win season shouldn't end with such a lopsided loss. So much of the work that went into fashioning such an amazing run will be clouded with a 'yeah, but...' It's a big step back for a program that took so many paces forward this season. The long faces in the locker room acknowledged the regression. It just didn't make sense." It was Notre Dame's third championship game loss in four years, and they'd lose the following year to UConn again — albeit in a 10-point game. The Irish finally broke through in 2018 with a title win over Mississippi State. "They had hoped to trade in the perfect season for the perfect ending, but in the end the Indianapolis Colts were left with nothing. Just a bitter, hollow feeling that will last well into the offseason and they try to figure out how another brilliant season could end so badly," IndyStar columnist Bob Kravitz wrote. Peyton Manning had already won one Super Bowl, and Jim Irsay had long talked about his desire to bring more than one Lombardi Trophy back to Indianapolis. This was as close as the Colts came — and have come since. "What's sad is, the Colts could have achieved so much this day. They could have fully validated a decade's worth of excellence with a second Super Bowl title in four seasons. And Manning could have become one of 11 quarterbacks to win multiple titles, and insinuated himself into the conversation about the greatest quarterback of all time. Immortality was within reach, for the franchise, for the quarterback," Kravitz wrote. "A disappointing season? Absolutely not. A disappointing finish? Without a doubt." Facing elimination in Game 5, the Pacers absolutely walloped the Lakers in a 120-87; Pacers fans had real belief Indiana had a chance to knock off the Shaq and Kobe-led Lakers. And in Game 6, the Pacers won each of the first three quarters, carrying a five-point lead going into the fourth and looking like they'd push the series to an improbable Game 7. But in the end, Shaq was just too much. "There was no victory for the Indiana Pacers... which means there will be no NBA championship. Not this year, anyway," IndyStar columnist Bill Benner wrote. "But there was valor. There was vindication. And while those values feel empty when so determined and prolonged a quest finally has been denied, when the path to defeat feels like a stake being driven through the heart, in time the Pacers should look back with pride on their resiliency, resolve and effort, if not the final result." "They didn't surprise us. They played well," Lakers guard Rick Fox said. "They played like champions. One team had to lose." "I think it was remarkable the way they played," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "They gave us some wonderful ballgames." "On this night, there was a gnawing sense of emptiness, of what-might-have-been. Nobody was taking solace in the way the Hoosiers had performed the past month. In time, though they will know what they've done. They will know. And appreciate it all," wrote IndyStar columnist Bob Kravitz. The 2002 run is remembered mostly for the Sweet 16 upset of Duke (and that A.J. Moye block on Carlos Boozer). Few remember the unranked Hoosiers actually led 44-42 with 9:52 left in the second half of the national title game. "I'm disappointed because this isn't what we came here for," senior Dane Fife said. "We came here expecting to win. No one else thought we could do it, but everyone in this locker room believed that were going to win this thing. And when we took the lead in the second half, I think we all just thought right then that we were going to do it." "What we've done is special," Fife added. "What we've done is get Indiana basketball back where Indiana basketball is supposed to be." More than 20 years later, Indiana basketball hasn't been back to a Final Four — or past a Sweet 16. This one hurts personally because I was a freshman at IU, and let me tell you, tear gas stings like a *****. A year after the Fairleigh Dickinson debacle, Purdue's long Final Four wait was finally over. The Boilermakers, behind the National Player of the Year Zach Edey, had broken through and reached their first Final Four since 1980 and were one win away from a national title. Waiting for them was the defending national champions, who were on a historic heater. Yet, the Boilers led UConn 23-21... and then the Huskies did what they do. They went to work, eventually pulling away for a 75-60 win. UConn set a new record outscoring its NCAA tournament opponents by a combined 140 points. "Yes the Boilers could've won something remarkable, could've capped this comeback by going from chumps to champs over the next 40 minutes, but one thing they couldn't do was lose," wrote IndyStar's Gregg Doyel. "By getting to the Final Four, then to the 2024 title game, their redemption was complete. Imperfect, but complete." "We were able to partially silence all the haters," redshirt senior Mason Gillis said. "If we would've won the national championship, we would be able to say we silenced the haters." "It hurts because these opportunities are slim," Matt Painter said. "You say you're going to get back here, but…" It was Bird vs. Magic. The first chapter of a saga that would change basketball forever. And it ended it disappointment for the Cinderella Sycamores. Led by Larry Bird, Indiana State was 33-0 and ranked No. 1 coming into the title game. The Sycamores had captivated the country: A team that came from nowhere with a chance to pull off the seemingly impossible. But in the final vs. the Spartans, ISU didn't put its best foot forward. You could credit MSU's zone defense or the brilliance of Magic Johnson, but there were self-inflicted wounds, too. The Sycamores made just 10-of-22 free throws. Bird scored 19 points, 10 below his season average, and made just 7-of-21 shots. "When you come down to the final night, you have to have a great game to win, and this wasn't one for us," ISU coach Bill Hodges said. "I'll tell you, though, we had a great year and we're proud of that. Of course, we're disappointed. Our goal was to win the NCAA. Michigan State played extremely well and it's difficult to come from behind all night... We gave it our best shot. I couldn't be more proud of these guys. They never gave up and fought to the end." The Sycamores got within 52-46 midway through the second half, but got no closer as MSU won 75-64. "I hate to lose, just like all the other guys on our team, but I guess we did all right," Bird said. "We won 33 games." Playing in their own backyard, Gordon Hayward's last-second heave was just inches wide of the what could have completed the greatest underdog story of all-time. Butler, with an enrollment of 4,200, was trying to become the smallest school to win it all since Holy Cross in 1947. Before Hayward's last-second heave, the future NBA standout had another shot in the game's final seconds and the Dawgs down just one. Hayward caught the ball and tried to dribble to his left, but Duke's Kyle Singler forced him right. Hayward dribbled toward the baseline, picked up the ball, leaned back and arched the ball over the extended arm of 7-1 Brian Zoubek. 'If that ball goes in, game over,' Horizon League commissioner Jon LeCrone said. 'Man, I wish I could have that one back," Hayward said. "I wish I could just go back and shoot that shot once more.' He'd get one more shot. This one from about 50 feet and the Bulldogs trailing by two. If it goes in, it's the greatest shot in NCAA tournament history. 'Literally, it was a movie. It was a movie,' Butler assistant Teryy Johnson said. 'I could see it now. You're sitting there, and it goes.' 'Once Gordon shot that half-court shot, a part of me thought, 'This is how it's going to end,'' Singler said. It missed. Barely. "We just came up one possession short," Butler coach Brad Stevens said. "In a game of about 145 possessions, it's hard to stomach when you're on the wrong end of that." Maybe this is recency bias, but this one felt destined for a different result. The Pacers had beaten the odds the entire playoffs and their hobbled star was off to such a hot start — and then the rug got pulled out from under Pacers fans. It was only the Pacers' second time in the NBA Finals since leaving the ABA and it was the closest the franchise has ever gotten to an NBA championship. Now with Tyrese Haliburton's lengthy recovery on the horizon — and Myles Turner's free agency departure — another chance at a title seems so far away.
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tre Johnson's Outfit at 2025 NBA Draft is Turning Heads For the Wrong Reason
Tre Johnson's Outfit at 2025 NBA Draft is Turning Heads For the Wrong Reason originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The NBA Draft is a moment where 59 players from across the world will hear their name called, marking the beginning of their childhood dream of becoming NBA players. Advertisement While the draft is, of course, known for providing the NBA's biggest stars, it is also known for giving us some dos and don'ts when it comes to fashion. Whether it was LeBron James' baggy suit during the 2003 NBA Draft, Trae Young's shorts with his suit or Kevin Knox's "Fortnite" suit in 2018, there have been plenty of memorable suits throughout the years. Unfortunately for former Texas Longhorns star, Tre Johnson, his suit appears to be trending toward joining this list of fashion don'ts. The No. 6 overall selection by the Washington Wizards also went the shorts route, but his are oversized, and he has a pair of white sox to go with them. Advertisement Fans on social media had plenty to say about his outfit, with many of them not necessarily feeling it. "Draft outfit stolen from a 1920s boys boarding school," joked one fan. "If he doesn't come out with a guitar singing "Shoot To Thrill" I'm leaving the arena," said another. "Getting attention was his goal, not fashion. Unfortunately many will fall into his trap of commenting on this poorly chosen outfit …. Myself included," wrote a third. "Not tre… dressed like he attends a hs all male boarding school," quipped another. Tre Johnson stands with NBA commissioner Adam Silver after being selected as the sixth pick by the Washington Penner-Imagn Images While fans may not love his outfit, fans in D.C. will love his scoring ability. The 2025 SEC Freshman of the Year averaged 19.9 points per game on 42.7% shooting from the field and 39.7% from deep. Advertisement With the Wizards moving on from Jordan Poole, Johnson can step into that role and possibly be even more efficient. Related: Cooper Flagg's NBA Salary Revealed After Making Draft History This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 26, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
NBA free agency 2025: Live updates, news, rumors as Deandre Ayton reportedly agrees to terms with the Los Angeles Lakers, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander signs extension with Thunder
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