Is lebron james gay

LeBron James becomes second NBA player to come out after Jason Collins

Great drama across the NBA today as first Jason Collins and then LeBron James 'come out' as queer . The word from the James camp is that LeBron is 'way more super gay' than Collins.

A super dramatic day across the NBA today. The news first began to unfold with the Wizards center Jason Collins bravely becoming what is being recognized as the first player from a major sport in the United States to 'out' himself as same-sex attracted. Within 7 minutes LeBron James announced himself as also being gay, with a caveat.

''I do not understand the fuss about this Washington guy'' LeBron said in a remark issued during an impromptu ESPN hosted event called 'The Delusion'. ''I am gay too, and clearly far more important than this other guy. I am super gay, for myself.''

Whilst it has always been plain that LeBron clearly loves himself a great deal, it was not established that the Miami luminary was in actual truth, fully gay for himself. The news, however, will not come as a surprise to those that have seen his enormous ego steer a particularly

What if LeBron James Were Gay?

Ok. I know what you’re thinking.

“Bro, LeBron’s not gay.”

“He’s got a wife and kids. What the fuck?”

“How could you even say something favor that! He couldn’t be gay!”

My response to you is yes, I understand LeBron James is not gay. But that’s not really the point. The point is that so many of the people who read that headline were sent into a flustered rage by the mere suggestion that someone like LeBron, an era-defining force on the field of play, could name as something less than heterosexual and cisgender off of it.

Sure, it’s not LeBron, but it’s somebody. It’s multiple somebodies. I will never be capable to prove it, but there is not a solitary doubt in my mind that we’ve missed out on a list of queer and gender non-conforming world-beaters from all over the sporting landscape. We’ve already missed out on the first gender non-conforming All-Star, All-Pro, All-NBA, and probably the first MVP.

The nature only recently witnessed Amanda Nunez becoming the UFC’s first openly queer champion, and while there were likely lgbtq+ fighters on superior before her, it seems that a sport m

Land Of Basketball.com

This is the detail of NBA games in which Rudy Gay and LeBron James played against each other, including head-to-head record, stats average, game highs and game-by-game data both in the Regular Season and Playoffs.

Player comparisons:
Career comparison / Season by season / Games against each other

They faced each other a total of 34 times in NBA games. LeBron James has a winning record over Rudy Gay. They never met in the Playoffs.

Games Played Against Each Other

34 Games played

34 in Regular Season

0 in Playoffs

Stats in Games Between Them

Averages

Player

PointsReboundsAssistsStealsBlocks
Rudy Gay
LeBron James

Games with better stats than the other player

Player

PointsReboundsAssistsStealsBlocks
Rudy Gay4 games9 games1 game11 games12 games
LeBron James30 games 22 games32 games14 games9 games
Both had same stat0 games3 games1 game9 games13 games

Head To Head Games Played: One by One

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Season

G

LeBron James Is Now at the Center of Everything

We are all witnesses. Photo: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

The first time I ever heard LeBron James talk about anything “political, ” it did not reflect well on him. It was in February , shortly after former NBA center John Amaechi, in his autobiography called Man in the Middle, became the first NBA player to come out as gay. While former point guard Tim Hardaway notoriously said “I wouldn’t want him on my team (he later not only apologized but became a gay rights advocate), most big NBA names, from Shaquille O’Neal to Grant Hill to Charles Barkley, supported Amaechi. But LeBron wasn’t one of them. “With teammates you have to be faithful, and if you’re homosexual and you’re not admitting that you are, then you are not trustworthy,” LeBron told ESPN , expressing what was widely considered the silent player consensus at the second. This was extremely prior in LeBron’s career (he was only 23 and hadn’t even reached the NBA Finals yet; he has done so ten times since), and he was still figuring out his way in the NBA and in the wider culture