The Pilot News

Secret to Lakers’ superstar pairing? No jealousy, James says

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(AP) - Lebron James believes the secret to the success of his partnershi­p with Anthony Davis goes far beyond talent.

“We’re not jealous of each other,” James said Thursday. “I think that’s the best thing.”

The Lakers are three wins from a championsh­ip in their first season with the All-star duo. Davis scored 34 points and James had 25 in their 116-98 victory over Miami in Game 1, the first time the Lakers had a pair of 25-point scorers in an NBA Finals game since Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’neal in Game 2 in 2004.

James played on other star-studded teams in Miami with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, and

Cleveland with Kyrie

Irving and Kevin Love. He said he’s seen how jealousy can creep in on teams with multiple alpha males and it certainly seemed to derail the Bryant-o’neal pairing that had produced three titles.

“That is the absolute contrary of what we are,” James said. “We know who we are. We know what we’re about. We want the best, seriously, every single day, both on and off the floor, for one another. We’re just not jealous of one another. I think that you align that with respect, I think the sky’s the limit.”

Davis said neither player is afraid to tell the other if he did something wrong and that they’ve always had good communicat­ion. He was asked if there was anything about James that would make him jealous.

“That he has a ring,” Davis said. “But he made a promise to me, and so far he’s kept it. Hopefully I don’t have to be envious of that much longer.”

EQUAL OPPORTUNIT­IES

Jeff Van Gundy can’t believe Mark Jackson, his NBA Finals broadcast partner and former player, hasn’t received another coaching opportunit­y.

Jackson is looking for a job in a league that has just five Black head coaches. Like Commission­er Adam Silver, both ABC analysts believe the numbers have to improve but are wary of a rule that would mandate it.

“One thing I don’t want is I don’t want to put in something similar to the Rooney Rule and have teams go through the motions of a fake interview just to make it sound like or seem like they interviewe­d a person, a minority,” Jackson said.

“There’s so many qualified individual­s out there that deserve the opportunit­y, deserve a chance. I would be thoroughly disappoint­ed if it continues to move the way it has, but truth told there’s 30 job opportunit­ies, so it’s not a big pool. But there’s opportunit­ies where it should take place and the best man should truly win the job, so hopefully it changes and I look forward to that.”

Doc Rivers, who was fired by the Clippers, reached an agreement Thursday to coach the Philadelph­ia 76ers. But Nate Mcmillan (Indiana) and Alvin Gentry (New Orleans) have lost their jobs this summer. The coaches that have been hired besides Rivers, (Tom Thibodeau in New York, Billy Donovan in Chicago and Steve Nash in Brooklyn) are white, and Nash has never coached.

AIR UP THERE

Michael Jordan’s final NBA championsh­ip run is coming back to the big — really big — screen.

“Michael Jordan to the Max” is being re-released to select IMAX theaters, 20 years after its original debut. The 45-minute film looks back at the 1998 playoffs, when the Chicago Bulls when their sixth NBA championsh­ip behind Jordan.

Actor Laurence Fishburne is the narrator of the film, which was originally shot on 70mm film cameras but now digitally remastered for IMAX format. It features NBA Commission­er Adam Silver as one of its executive producers.

Limited-time showings begin Oct. 9.

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