I am probably the last high profile basketball blogger to
weigh in on the Pistons/Pacers brouhaha on Friday. Over at
These Days is a nice roundup of reaction from around the web, and it gets
pretty varied from slightly miffed (Shaddax himself) to the hellfire and
brimstone that the mainstream has been pushing.
When I first saw the fight, I wasn't thinking about the thuggish players, the
half-retarded fans, or the disappointed coaches. What I immediately thought of
was how I'm going to have to have pounds and pounds of BS put on top of me by
the ESPN empire. And the next time I sat at my computer (since Friday night was
used for....recreational activities), I
giggled in anticipation of reading what
Jay
Mariotti had to say. And I wasn't disappointed!
But eventually, of course, everyone will
move on, the penalized players will return to their teams for those
revenue-producing postseason runs and the sicko society of sports will survive
the most chaotic incident I've seen this side of a European soccer stadium.
There's more gems like that in there. Now we will discuss the validity of the
decrying the 'sicko society of sports' by someone who is on Around the Horn.
I'm not saying that this fight wasn't a big deal, I just hate the fact that I
have to be told how its the second Pearl Harbor by dopes like Mariotti. As
Shaddax said in his entry, less moralizing and more morals makes everything a
lot easier, and on the plus side it doesn't make my brain and eyes bleed from
being subjected to the sad sack tales of the sports media.
Now that I've gotten my pot-shots in, I'll try to do the same thing without
being so annoying, starting out with quoting
a fantastic article by My Man Sam(TM) on Ron Artest, who has rightfully
become the poster boy of this incident:
This is what we all were afraid
of--what the Bulls feared when they traded Artest to the Indiana Pacers
despite believing he could become an elite player--the rage, the
uncontrollable anger that frightened everyone.
Now would be a good time for Sam to write a book like "the Artest rules",
because I'm sure in addition to the stories he lists in the article there are
many more. I have said the same thing before to many friends and here on the
blog regarding Artest: The man is crazy. He is not misunderstood or oddly
eccentric like Dennis Rodman. The man has serious mental problems that he has
been advised to receive treatment for, but has refused any help from the Bulls
or Pacers. Smith concludes his piece with this:
Perhaps we all should have seen this coming.
It never quite got there with Dennis Rodman,
but the pleas for help seemed obvious. It's just that when the guy can get a
key rebound or score a big basket or win Defensive Player of the Year--and
you're paying him millions--it's difficult to send him away for the treatment
he might need.
Don't blame the Pacers. No team does it.
After all, these are
professionals--mercenaries, really--and they assume the risks.
But Artest seemed to be crying out for help.
He asked for time off, either because he was tired from working with his new
music company or to promote its new release this week. The Pacers gave him a
few games off and everyone wrung their hands and asked how he could do that,
or maybe this was a ploy to get attention for his label or what the heck, it's
just Artest. It's not that the Pacers didn't know something was wrong.
Artest was a
handful throughout last spring's playoffs, missing flights and challenging
coach Rick Carlisle. He has tried to drive the team to trade him since. Teams
were curious about the talent, but fearful.
Stories continued about Artest, and the team
even put him off limits to questioners last week. Teammate O'Neal lashed out
when an ESPN crew came in last week to ask more questions about Artest. The
boiling point was nearing, but there's that thing about a watched pot. Then
everyone turned their heads, and the pot exploded.
There will be plenty of time now for Artest
to get help. We all hope he does this time.
The suspension to Artest perhaps wasn't the most fair thing on the surface.
After all Vernon 'mad max' Maxwell
only got 10 games for jumping in the stands. But given Artest's prior
history I think this was the best solution for both him and the league. And
commissioner David Stern himself has said that Artest's past played a role in
the severity of the suspension. I'm guessing that deep down Stern hopes that
Artest either gets help or goes away for good.
As far as the rest of the suspensions, they seem fair enough to me. While the
aforementioned pundits decrying the event were simply annoying, there were
others who tried to justify what the players did, or at least tried to place
principal blame on the fans. And that stance is no less than completely wrong. I
don't care to hear about 'street cred' or 'protecting yourself', or any similar
garbage. There is no justifiable reason for going into the stands. None. Point
them out to security and have them thrown out. The fans in Detroit who helped
escalate the matter are reprehensible, and I hope that the video tape available
gets them prosecuted. But controlling them is security's job, not the job of the
player to have some brief moment of revenge for whatever 'disrespect' took
place. If it gets to the point where the fans are throwing things, then get off
the court. They should know that as a professional athlete, it has been long
established that they are not on the same level as the fans. They need to be the
professionals and walk away. Not try and seek out vengeance veiled as
self-defense.
This would've been a normal NBA pseudo-fight if it had not spilled into the
stands. A non-story, and certainly not a black eye for western civilization, or
whatever hyperbole you or Jay Mariotti want to use. But that line was crossed
and I feel sorry for the NBA, who has to deal with the PR ramifications. And I'm
sure NBA is sorry that they let someone on the court who had the capabilities of
snapping and crossing that line.