jmh06
Wednesday, March 19th, 2008, 9:58 AM
QUOTE (BigDMcGee @ Wednesday, March 19th, 2008, 11:10 AM)

Also, this "NBA is garbage and it trickles down to society" is absurd. You have your causes and your effects completely switched around. Have ever considered that NBA players like AI or the Pacers, act this way because they came from the streets, not that the streets are bad because NBA players have tats and wear do rags? People aren't rubbing their WWAID Necklace, right before they go mug somebody at an ATM. The way NBA players act is a symptom of the problem, not it's cause.
And also, the NBA isn't "pushing this garbage image" Most of the consumers of expensive NBA Season tickets are white. The NBA hates it's thug image, and has been doing everything it can to try and counteract it, things like the dress code, severe penalties for on court violence, ect. The NBA would prefer nice, corporate friendly athletes, and truthfully the past couple years have had many of them emerge ( the most notable being Lebron, who comes across as warm, funny and media friendly, and is about the most unselfish mega star in league history on the court) But what can the league do about the fact that the best players of the game come from poor black inner cites? Make a ban on poor black athletes?
First, the Kobe shot was a joke. I'm pretty sure he tagged that chick in a CONSENSUAL encounter and she went looking for some cash. I live outside of Durham, and the girl's story there matched up even less than the stripper's story down here did.
Second, I stand corrected in regards to AI. In re-reading the story, he popped a random girl upside the head with a chair, not his girlfriend in the stomach with a bowling ball. Amazing how your memory can actually think he did something worse than he actually did. So, for getting the facts really wrong I do apologize. That said, either way, if you're from the streets or Mars, you know better than that.
And if the NBA wanted to solve the problem they'd up the draft age to 21. As you pointed out, the problem isn't the NBA so much as the kids and the environments they come from. I promise you if you take the worst kid in Harlem and gave him three years of tutelage at a Duke or a North Carolina he'd be a different person. You tell him he's got to go to school for one year, and only attend class for one semester (as he's gone by the time 2nd semester grades hit) I think you're just increasing the problem. Further, basketball players tend to get the 'star treatment' in college and are allowed to live off campus, etc. Make them live in the dorms and room with Joe Blow. Interacting with others from different walks of life is a great way to mature and adjust. Further, educating oneself to the highest extent possible would also help make each athlete more 'corporate friendly.'
Personally, I don't agree with the NBA and their suit policy. I don't think any policy like that should even have to be implemented. I'm 23 years old, so I grew up with MJ and the NBA's heyday. Even back then the Jordan's, Barkley's, etc. were wearing suits after games and nobody gave them a rule that they had to. I don't care what neighborhood or background you come from, everyone knows what is and is not 'class' and how to appropriately dress and act - especially when you're pulling down 20 million a year.
The NBA has done a great job of pushing 'corporate friendly' athletes and LeBron is a great example of this. Quite frankly, I think his marketing talent is more expansive than his basketball talent. The "LeBron's" Nike commercials last year were great. But one or two guys can't deter an entire image that teams like the Pacers have allowed to be created. That's where David Stern has to step in, which he does, but not to the extent Goodell does. If I were a player in each league, here's how I'd see it:
NFL: "Man, I better not fart and let Rog smell it" whereas the NBA is more "****, got arrested...Oh well, Stern ain't gonna do nothing."
All this said, I will commend Stern as his league has been fairly clean since the All Star game in Vegas a two years ago. That was like the high water mark of it all.