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Archive for the ‘David Stern’ Category

LeBrontourage: It’s All About Respect

Posted by Mack On July - 17 - 2010

nikebball

At long last, there is enough of a slight gap in my other pursuits for me to weigh in on the whole LeBron James situation.  And by “other pursuits”, I mean my day job, P90X (I’m in Week #3) and writing some technical articles to help support my revenue-generating activities.

So, why did I wait so long?  There is certainly no lack of people giving their two cents on the subject, and almost all of them have better credentials than myself (note that I did not say that they are more qualified – anyone that has read my stuff before knows the deal).  So, you knew that it was coming (my two cents, that is), and you knew that it was probably going to be a slightly different take.

If you are used to the same old shit, sorry.  That is not what we do here.  Just like Brett Favre throwing the ball to the wrong team, Peyton Manning doing anything to avoid any physical contact whatsoever and costing his team dearly by doing so even when big games are on the line, Pau Gasol or any nimrod from Duke flopping around like Serie A soccer players instead of playing tough defense, the French surrendering, and politicians being crooked…we like to take a slightly different angle on the sports stories of the day.  It’s our signature move; it’s what we do.

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Weekly Podcast – 05.30.2010

Posted by Mack On May - 30 - 2010

After a week off to attend to some family matters, we are back on schedule with the weekly podcast.  We also have some slightly better quality, thanks to a new microphone, and some better production values.  If you are listening to the stream on the blog, make sure to comment on our weekly features (Dude/Douche, King for the Day, etc.) — let us know what you think of the ones we have, as well as suggest any new ones.

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The NBA MVP Voting Process is a Joke

Posted by Mack On May - 3 - 2010

I am not trying to be provocative when I start a column like that, but what the hell else am I supposed to think when some buffoons didn’t vote for LeBron James this year?  I understand that there is a definite pecking order to these things.  If LeBron had been selected at the MVP in unanimous fashion, he would have been the first player to ever accomplish the feat, trumping Michael Jordan, Wilt Chamberlain, and everyone else.

Well so effing what?!?  In understand that some of the guys that have votes for these things have a vested interest in voting for “their guy” (more on that later), and there is inherently nothing wrong with that, especially in years where there is a bona fide competition for the MVP.

This year was not one of those years.  Anyone not voting for LeBron James this year is an absolute basketball moron, period.  The King put together a season this year that was one for the ages, and no one else was even close.   A voter not voting for LeBron opens himself up for justifiable criticism, but I would maintain that such criticism should approach professional censure, if not ostracism.

Here is the part that really gets me ticked off about these kind of things – everyone voting for this award (and just about all others in every major sport) works in and around the NBA, and should presumably know a little bit about the game. Anyone with even a cursory knowledge of the NBA and how things work over a long season should know that LeBron James was the MVP.  In fact, I would take that step further – anyone not voting for LeBron should have cast a huge doubt on his ability as a basketball person…or at the very least, some doubt about their ability to be objective.

Of the 7 first-place votes not garnered by LeBron: four went to Kevin Durant, a rising force that is possibly going to rewrite large sections of the record book before he is done, and is definitely going to win multiple MVP awards during his career, barring injury; and the other three votes went to Dwight Howard, a dominating force in the NBA right now, and the most dangerous big man since a young Shaq.  Durant and Howard cannot hold LeBron’s jock, in terms of being the Most Valuable Player in the league…not for one second combined.

Here is where it gets interesting – the three votes for Howard all came from the Orlando area.  Not surprising, I guess, but how about this – one of the guys (John Denton) works for orlandomagic.com, and another of them (David Steele) is an Orlando Magic team broadcaster.

If I was Richard DeVos or any of the other brass at the Magic, I would terminate those two nimrods with extreme prejudice.  They either know so little about basketball that they actually believe it the way they voted it, in which case they should be fired for gross incompetence – or they they are such homers that they cannot separate fact from fiction, in which case they should be fired for gross incompetence and locked up in a rubber room until they can differentiate between reality and fantasy.

What a shame that this kind of thing is allowed to happen.  I think it’s an indictment against the voting process itself that the guys that broadcast a team’s games and run a team’s web site have a vote at all, but if you are going to have that built into the process, you at least have to police these guys a little bit. 

Perhaps David Stern should step in and censure these two idiots.  Maybe in the future, folks would try to do their job the right way and vote for the most deserving player.

Then again, I still have a problem with Roberto Alomar having to wait an extra year to get into the baseball Hall of Fame, because (I guess) first-ballot Hall of Famers do not spit on umpires. 

When do you think one of these leagues is going to figure out how to have an awards voting process that doesn’t suck?  I am putting the over/under at “not in my lifetime”.

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A Tooth for a Tooth in Game 6

Posted by Mack On April - 29 - 2009

miller Make no mistake about it, the Boston Celtics have a decided advantage in this series against the Chicago Bulls, even without Kevin Garnett.  I am not that big into conspiracy theories as a general rule, but over the past two NBA Playoff seasons, I have witnessed the following:

- Kevin Garnett setting about 57,439 moving screens in last year’s Championship run for the Celtics.

- “Big Baby” Davis somehow getting the same treatment, which is probably even a more shameless favoring of the Celtics by the refs because Davis is a load and knows how to throw his weight around and has no problem doing so with impunity during this series against the Bulls.

- Derrick Rose getting very clearly fouled on 7 consecutive possessions in the 4th quarter of Game 5 with only 2 foul calls taking place.  I know that the guy is a rookie, and I know that the Celtics winning the series could mean more money for the league, but do they have to make it so obvious?  This fact probably has me even madder than the Rondo-Miller play (see below) because if the refs would have called those 7 Bulls possessions according to the rules, then the Bulls had about a 80% chance of winning the game in regulation…not to mention Vinny Del Negro would not have panicked and would have kept giving Rose the ball every possession instead of Ben Gordon, who was still special, but you could tell he was feeling the effects of the hamstring strain he suffered in Game 4.  Rose, on the other hand, was able to get to the rim against any 2 Celtics defenders seemingly any time he wanted.  Granted, if I were Vinny Del Negro, and they were hacking the stuffing out of my rookie point guard like that at the end of the game and not getting called for it, I might have started to explore other options as well.

- Ray Allen getting a foul called on him for lowering his shoulder and trying to bully his way through a screen, then acting like the Bulls player (Brad Miller) initiated the contact.  This play looked even worse because Miller was kind of throwing Allen around like a rag doll by the end of the play.  It was, without a question, a very easy call for the officials to make…just like the ticky-tacky foul Ray-Ray committed on Ben Gordon that he whined to the refs about for at least 5 minutes.  Dude, you get 6 fouls, and you used them all…sit down and let the guys with enough discipline to play within the rules continue the game.

- The refs “missing” a fragrant foul call by Rajon Rondo against Brad Miller at the end of the OT in Game 5.  I will admit that calling this a regular old foul was an understandable call, as it happened in real time…but there was ample opportunity for the refs to look at the play and get it right, as Miller was trying to literally stop the bleeding on the Bulls bench.  There was even a question as to whether or not there was goaltending on the play, so you know damn well that the refs watched the play at least a couple of times, saw that Rondo was very clearly headhunting, as Miller’s arm was completely outstretched with the ball in it when Rondo smacked him in the face.  Here’s what else you have to know, if you either live more than 50 miles outside of New England and/or have an IQ above 80 – the refs absolutely, without question, had to make a conscious decision that, despite what they saw on the replay, they were not going to call a flagrant foul on the most important play of the game, even though that flagrant foul was probably one of the easiest flagrant fouls to call in the entire time that the league has had a flagrant foul rule.  If the replay is not enough for you, how about just looking at the dude’s busted grill?  For whatever reason (as if we don’t already know), the refs decided to ignore the rule in this particular case.

So, is there anything that can be done about this, other than bitching and moaning?  Well, I am not sure you will ever be able to get rid of the fact that smaller players usually get carte blanche to beat up on guys, even other smaller players (see Bowen, Bruce for more info)…and the refs seem to look the other way even more when you have a little guy going up against a big guy.  But that does not mean that the league is powerless in this case.

The league is probably the only entity that can right this ship.  The refs awarded a game of this series to the Boston Celtics unfairly.  The league can award Game 6 to the Chicago Bulls.  I know that we are talking about the No Balls Association here, but they would be well within their rights to suspend Rajon Rondo for Game 6, right?  I mean, he did commit a violent act of whaling on a defenseless shooter’s face during a league-sanctioned contest, right?  What’s wrong with taking away Boston’s most important player for Game 6?  A tooth for a tooth (pardon the pun) is what I say.

I, for one, do not think that David Stern has the balls, but that is basically all that is required here – a little testicular fortitude on the part of the commissioner to right a very clear, and very easy to fix, wrong perpetrated against one of its proud franchises by the refs…assuming that the refs did not make their decision because they have been under orders to favor the Celtics, Lakers and Cavaliers at all costs since October.  I mean, all of the ref problems are fixed after the league hired that military dude, right?

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Random Thoughts from Game 6

Posted by Mack On July - 5 - 2008

OK — I wanted to wait for a little while before I posted this one.  I needed to make sure that my emotions were not getting the best of me and that I was still just as ticked off when I came back to read this a couple of weeks later.

So, without further ado, here are the random thoughts from the end of Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

  • James Posey.  Watching James Posey commit a foul after the whistle on almost every play was really wearing me thin.  Jeff Van Gundy summed it up best…he’s the kind of guy you want on your team, but every other team hates him.  Move over Bruce Bowen — there is a new queen punk bitch in the NBA.  Although Posey actually brings something else to the table, unlike Bowen himself.
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It’s Official — The NBA Fix is On

Posted by Mack On June - 15 - 2008

Many folks far smarter than myself have given their opinion on the whole Tim Donaghy mess in the NBA.  It was the single most important part of the NBA finals, until the Celtics made one of the best comebacks Lakers had one of the biggest collapses in sports history.  I mean, seriously, it reminded me of the 2004 ALCS…sorry, I could not resist.

Man, that game was something.  It was, without a doubt, one of the most dramatic moments I have seen in sports.  Couple that with Tyree’s catch and Kansas-Memphis…and I am done for 2008.  I can’t take any more.  What a year it has been…and it’s not even half over yet.

So, let me take a little time and explain why Game 4, despite all of the drama, proves once and for all that the NBA is not legit and the fix is on. 

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