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By Trevor, Section NBA
by Trevor Freeman My biggest objection with Amare Stoudamire and Boris Diaw being suspended for Game 5 was not the complete injustice of it. And that is saying an awful lot because the fairness of David Stern's decision to suspend the two of them was only a slight notch below Vince McMahon forcing Bobby Lashley to have to defend his ECW title against him, Shane McMahon and Umaga in a handicap match on the last pay-per view. My beef with the commissioner lies in the absolute lack of testicular fortitude he put on display when he cancelled his scheduled appearance in Phoenix after making the suspension decision.
This is not the first time David Stern has shown that he is an incompetent twit who may also be smuggling a pair of raisins under his boxer shorts. Let's take a quick look at some of the other "moves" he has made over the past fifteen years that have helped the NBA get passed by the NFL as the premier professional sports league in our country.
Instead of keeping the NBA on NBC, which was a raging success, Stern decided to go with this NBATV, ESPN, ABC (for about 3 regular season games a year) and TNT format. This has been an unmitigated disaster for the NBA. In what world did it make sense to not make the NBA available for the many people who do not have cable? How many people with cable did they think were going to shell out $199 a year to watch the NBA? It was a move that made no sense whatsoever. Let me use this analogy. Two bars open across the street from each other. One is named "NBA" and the other is named "NCAA". The one named "NBA" has a nice lounge area, flatscreen TVs, a large menu, hot bartenders that don't even pretend to be interested and a guy giving away mints, cologne and hair gel in the bathroom. The girls who frequent the bar are nice, but they expect drinks to be bought for them before they even begin to give you the time of day. Oh.....and a pint of Yuengling costs $8. Meanwhile there is another bar directly across the street called "NCAA". No flatscreens but plenty of regular TVs, no lounge-type furniture but plenty of wooden four seat tables in the back. No guy giving away mints in the bathroom. However the bartenders all have big breasts and give off that "you may get lucky if you keep tipping well" vibe, the chicken wings are fantastic and a pint of Yuengling costs $3. Which bar would you choose to go to? I think we all know the answer to that question. All of us.......except David Stern. Because the pro game has to compete with the college game during the same time slots, the only thing leaving NBC did was help college basketball pick up a larger number of casual fans. 2. Moving the minimum age rule to one year out of high school instead of three years like the NFL's. Stern might as well have handed over his nutsack at the negotiating table when he caved on this. All year long, we heard that "the NBA is going to adopt the NFL's policy" then they just completely caved under veiled threats of litigation. Anybody who follows the sport of basketball knows that if players were forced to stay in school through their junior year that it would impact both the NCAA and NBA games in an extremely positive way. The NFL's rule is something that the league has gone to the mat for and will do whatever it takes to defend. You know why? Because this rule is a vital part of why the league has been so successful. People grow attachments to certain players in college and they then follow that player into the pros. Players also become recognizable brand images due to their success on the collegiate level. To top it all off they are more ready to make an impact because they are older and stronger. The NBA needed to put this rule in and they failed. It is as simple as that. 3. Instituting a dress code for the players. Do you want to know why the league has a perception of thuggery? It is because its management caves into media pressure and does moronic things like instituting a dress code for its players. Josh Hancock was wasted, had an eighth of Missouri's finest herb, and was talking with a female acquaintance when we crashed his car around midnight (about what.....I think a solid assumption can be made). Is this any better or worse than Stephen Jackson firing off his gun at a strip club? If the NBA wasn't so concerned about its public perception then nobody else would be. I guarantee it. 4. Killing the "game" atmosphere If there is anything the NBA should regulate it is the amount of crappy music I hear during each game. At some point over the last fifteen years, a decision was made to turn every NBA game into a trip to the China Club. What they haven't realized is that when people go to games.........they go to watch basketball. We aren't there to hear "Let's Get It Started" twenty-six times over a three-hour period. We don't need a cue to start yelling "defense". All we need is a basketball, players, a few coaches and some quality hot dog and beer vendors. This is so easy yet it gets screwed up at 93.2% of all NBA games. The NBA was once the dominant professional sports league in this country. It mattered. When Magic, Larry and Michael were executing their craft it was appointment viewing. Over time, that love of the game disappeared with the casual fans whose support the league and its owners are so desperately seeking. In my opinion that support eroded due to the laughable leadership of one person. The owners of the teams in this great league need to take a step. Fire Stern. Get back on NBC. And get the game back where it belongs.
If you have any questions or comments, feel free to e-mail me at trevor.freeman@realityfanforum.com.
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