December 18, 2019
Garnett 'We Broke LeBron' — Bill Simmons Podcast (2019)
On December 18, 2019, Kevin Garnett told The Bill Simmons Podcast that Boston's playoff approach had "broke LeBron," recounting targeted trash talk and psychological tactics used against LeBron during the 2010 and 2012 postseason meetings [16][19].
Quick Facts
What Happened
On The Bill Simmons Podcast, Kevin Garnett described a deliberate psychological strategy Boston used in playoff series against LeBron James, saying "We broke LeBron" and explaining that the Celtics 'didn't give a f--- about LeBron' as part of their mindset [16]. Garnett recounted on-court trash talk, physical defense and targeted attempts to fluster LeBron across the 2010 postseason encounters (Celtics vs. Cavaliers) and the early-2010s Celtics–Heat meetings that followed [16][21]. Garnett's remarks were presented as retrospective storytelling rather than newly revealed contemporaneous evidence, but they drew renewed attention to specific episodes from the 2011 and 2012 series when Boston players, led vocally by Garnett, tried to shift the psychological balance of the matchup [16][2]. Media summaries amplified Garnett's phrasing and framed it as a personal anecdote about how Boston attempted to alter LeBron's competitive edge [19].
What They Said
“"We broke LeBron."”
“"The C's, we didn't give a f--- about LeBron. We didn't fear LeBron, and we didn't think that he could beat all five of us."”
Why It Matters
Garnett's 2019 retelling matters because it reframes several Celtics–Heat encounters as not only team rivalry moments but also a direct, personal psychological campaign aimed at LeBron James; the phrase "We broke LeBron" gave a concise description of how Garnett remembered the exchanges and clarified that some of the on-court confrontation was intended as individualized mind games rather than general team rivalry rhetoric [16]. For historians of the Celtics–Heat rivalry and those studying player-to-player dynamics, Garnett's account provides a primary-source recollection from a central participant that connects specific series events to a deliberate competitive approach [16][21].
What Happened Next
The podcast segment resurfaced contemporaneous debate about those playoff series and prompted media recaps that cited Garnett's wording; outlets summarized the remarks and contextualized them against game performances — notably LeBron's 45-point Game 6 in the 2012 ECF — which some described as an on-court reply to Boston's tactics [16][2][19]. There was no formal public response from LeBron at the time that disputed Garnett's characterization; subsequent public interactions between the two have been limited to mutual acknowledgements of competitive respect rather than sustained public confrontation, including LeBron's 2016 Instagram message thanking Garnett for what he taught him competitively [20].