Yo Crazyeights this is an absolutely excellent post. Well thought out and I love the fact that you brought up how the media has been on some "Let's Lynch the Lakers" while they're down mantra they've been on all season and last for that matter.crazyeights wrote:Sedale, bear with me here, man, I'm not disagreeing with you about the value of analytics. In fact I +1'd one of your first posts on it here.
My point was pretty simple: ESPN is very, very agenda driven. It's not even a conspiracy as much as they have talking points like any other network and they try to hit them hard.
An obvious talking point of theirs is the narrative that the Lakers are a fading franchise, their star, Kobe's body has failed him after years of overuse (read: chucking), their golden king owner had passed succeeding power to his underserving, incompetent son and his business savvy daughter. Throw in a love triangle (see what I did there? and technically it can be familial love or obligation) for Shakespearean drama and you're there.
So that was their premise. And as far as the talking points:
The Lakers are old, irrelevant, misguided, and stuck in their ways.
To say these talking point aren’t pervasive and haven't reached critical mass this season is wrong. You see it from their national/local radio programming, flagship show, and spearheaded with particular zeal by their affiliate blogs.
So I'd that's true then you have to ask yourself why? Why can't the Lakers simply rebuild? Why are they trashing us nonstop more then they are simply praising the winning teams?
At a certain point it seems personal. And it is for these analysts--these guys are Laker haters. They loathe Kobe Bryant and the team he's kept in relevance. We're at a tipping point and they're going for blood with potshots about analytics and hit pieces that are in no way journalism.
The video I posted is to illustrate just who we are dealing with here. And yes you can say the True Hoop guys are a small vocal minority and be absolutely correct.
However, to say they don't have an agenda as you inferred in the post I was responding to I think it’s fair to look at the evidence of these “journalists” and take a look at their motives. They don’t seem to be benevolent to me. They’re not trying to help the Lakers find their way. They’re trying to take them down. Slava suggested they have something to gain, beyond simple Laker hate, which to me makes sense because the Lakers are such a popular franchise, that I bet as a whole it isn’t good for business (ESPN or NBA) that so many people around the country who don’t even live in Los Angeles, their favorite team is the Lakers, rather than the team a half state away, because when the Lakers are this bad, it doesn’t bode well.
Maybe that’s off-base, and really it’s not on me to know. I pointed out, though, something that was admittedly off-topic (you know what OT stands for, right?). I said it was human behavior to be tribal.
You and I don’t disagree on analytics. I do think there are different issues here. ESPN’s affiliated analysts dislike the Lakers so they use any means necessary to delegitimize them. It has a personal flavor to it, which is why I brought up that I agree with Barkley: some of the most vocal proponents of analytics just happen to be these wesley guys who have a zeal in ragging on the old guard. Barkley is being defensive, but I actually agree the way guys like in the video and specifically ESPN act are like high school kids who were bullied and now turning the tables. There’s something very distasteful about it all.
Again, this was a post replying to the fact that it’s not a conspiracy. I said it doesn’t have to be a conspiracy, it can simply be human nature, and the unfortunate direction sports journalism and journalism in general is going.
(Note: With ernest respect--I didn’t read any of your post about Charles Barkley.
I brought him in to suggest the one aspect of his quote on analytics: a lot of the messengers here with advanced stats are guys who seem desperate to have power, and now they have the numbers (in amounts of people.)
It’s a mob mentality. TBH, I don’t care about Barkley, he’s a craggily old blowhard who occasionally hits the nail on the head. Regardless, he used to be funnier.
My point was never about analytics, or their value. I totally agree that we should invest heavily in them and that they are a tool and not an end all, and that very few proponents of them seem to think they are an end all—it is a sort of straw man argument, however I can also see that some of the sports writer advanced stats guys seem to be so overzealous about selling them, they act like they are the end all.
These are separate issues, man. I get that. As I said, slightly OT. And still not a conspiracy theory. I don’t usually take to those. I do take to simple observations to human behavior, which I think Barkley attempted.)
They've used every avenue possible to discredit and take shots at the Lakers, like this analytics piece this Pelton guy wrote. More of the same agenda driven venom is in it.
I was gonna make a thread pointing out such articles and quotes and pot shots. Bottom line is this and it's what my elders always told me....The people that praise you when you're on top are the ones that ALWAYS respected you. The ones that talk about you when you're down are the ones that NEVER respected you, never liked you and could only wait until you're down to say and act how they really feel.
Great post thought.