Tag Archives: NBA

Who’s Responsible? We are.

We created the monster.

And now, we want him back in his cage.

This all dates back to the monster’s high school days.  He seemed innocent enough, dunking on every poor little prep academy player in the nation.  Triple doubles came like free throws.  They were supposed to happen.  The monster was declared the ‘chosen one’, and then later, ‘King’.  We ate it up, all of us. 

Whether we liked or disliked the monster, we tuned in.  We perpetuated his fame, his greatness, his freakish ability the likes of which none of us had ever seen before.  We loved that he was bringing his ’hometown team’ to the forefront of the National Basketball Association.  He did it with ease and grace.  He seemed like the love of our lives. 

He took a terrible team to the NBA Finals one year.  He won a NBA Most Valuable Player Award.  He would go on to win another.  We added more and more to his hypothetical resume.  We loved it. 

The monster declared that he wanted to pursue free agency.  We loved that even more.  That was awesome!  We figured he deserved the chance to be wooed, he had never been wooed out of high school by any colleges.  This was because, well, he was the monster.  Monsters don’t go to college.  They are above men, therefore they play with the greatest men and embarrass them.  They demonstrate their ability and flex their monster muscles on the largest stage.  Our monster wanted to bask in his value, he wanted to hear it directly from the franchises that would trample their mothers to get his autograph.  No harm done, we thought.

Then, we saw what we never thought the monster was capable of doing.  He quit.  In fact, he quit twice.  Both times he quit were times when his team needed him most.   But alas, he simply couldn’t go the extra mile.  He embarrassed the droves of people who supported him.  The embarrassment was even bigger because men tripped up the monster.  Two of the men were on their last legs.  The monster seemed vulnerable like he never had before.  So did we.

But given his situation with free agency and his injured elbow (he made sure to show us the pain by shooting a left-handed free throw), we could understand.  The monster was more man than we had made him out to be.  Men get hurt, men get tired, men can’t always do it alone.  We felt for the monster.  We saw that even our greatest monsters can have man-like attributes. 

Free agency arrived.  It was unclear where the monster would call home.  He waited out his fellow semi-monsters, he needed to narrow his options.  That’s permissable, we thought.  The monster should be able to choose his best situation, he is the monster.  Then, cruelly, the monster decided to be the last one standing.  He decided to have an ESPN-produced special announcing where he would playing next season.  At first, there were some ’Ooohs’ and ‘Ahhhhs’ (probably because we felt he deserved to choose a hat from three on a podium, remember, he never got the chance to announce his college choice, college is for chumps), but then it turned on the monster.   People realized that the monster got too big for his own good.  Maybe even too big for our own good!  His hedonism had exemplified Robert Nozick’s idea that the philosophy was “fit only for swine”.  He over-indulged in his monster persona, he rolled in it, he basked in it, and he became fat.  The monster had become miserably fat with hubris and greed.

We are tired of the monster holding us hostage.  Yet, it is difficult to call ourselves ’hostages’, because quite simply, we gave ourselves to the monster.   We propped him up.  We gave him all the media attention.  We showered him with our love.  If we didn’t love him, we showered him with our ratings.  We declared him a ‘King’ before he had lived a day in the kingdom.  In history books, we see that Kings often become a victim of their own arrogance.  This is no different.  We’ve allowed our hostage situation to last a decade (give or take), and now we realize that our Stockholm Syndrome has disappeared?  Now we don’t want to live in the palm of the King’s hand?  Now?

 We gave the monster his power.  Now he’s abusing it.  Good luck stopping him before he stops himself.

Want the monster back in the cage?

Too bad.  We are the cage.

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Spring?

It’s springtime and that can only mean one thing…

It’s baseball season. 

 Which in turn means one other thing…

It’s the time of year when I concentrate an inordinate amount of self-produced enthusiasm to things such as the NHL Playoffs, NBA Playoffs, the Masters, etc.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s not as if I am anti-baseball, I’ve loved the game forever and I always will.  And it’s also not as if I love every second of the NBA and NHL either.  Aside from watching my ugly yet beloved Flyers and the occasional Nuggets game, the two leagues are on the ‘back burner’ for me until the One Shining Moment montage is completed. However, I just can’t get excited for the beginning of baseball season.  It’s because I’m afraid I’ll kill it.

Every summer of every year I watch baseball.  I eat hot dogs, I crack sunflower seeds and I watch the beautiful national pastime from the top of the first, to the bottom of the ninth, with an occasional stretch in the seventh.  I love the simplicity of the game, the sound of the crack of a bat, the extraordinary spin on a breaking ball and the heavy helping of Americana that is layered within it all.  However, I love those things in the summer.  Not now.  Now there are professionals in other leagues scrapping and clawing for births in the playoffs.  In a couple of weeks they same leagues will be full of teams staving off elimination and the ends of their seasons.  Would I rather watch Jon Rauch labor through a seventh inning jam than that?  No chance in hell.

My enthusiasm grows with every day that the heat index rises and the ability to move without sweating diminishes.  I want baseball back in my life, but I have to wait until July and August to get comfortable with it again.  Until then, it feels so forced.  By the time the middle of the summer rolls around, I’ll be ready and my relationship with baseball will blossom again.  A beautiful thing.  It will come into full bloom when the pennant races are heating up and the playoffs begin.  I’m afraid that if I begin our relationship any sooner, it will die out before we even get to watch Independence Day fireworks together.  It may wither and drift away. 

I’d like to ask all the baseball aficionados out there to excuse my explanation, seeing as how I’m probably not completely sane to begin with.  But in the interest of baseball and myself resuming a functional (albeit conditional) relationship down the line, I have to give America’s pastime some space.  It’s not the game, it’s me.

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