Knick4Real wrote:3toheadmelo wrote:BugginOut wrote:Don’t believe we had a whole season of Knicks fans apologizing to Randle for treating him bad last season, and that he was our “savior” and as soon as he has a bad 2 weeks everyone is all back to wanting to ship him out.
Either root for the man or don’t, but don’t flip flop
Big facts
This makes ZERO sense.
Nobody has to pick a side. Every fan has a right to an opinion based on performance.
For example, when Obi came into the league he played like a deer in headlights -- and the fans were down on him. However, he upped his game in the final weeks of the season and fans recognized him for the improvement. There was no "flip-flop." Opinions changed, and rightly so.
The point is, I don't have to pick to "like" someone with no chance of ever changing my mind if their game slacks off. That's called blind fandom and I'll have none of it. I will applaud a player if he shows me something, not because I "decided" to root for him and must stick to that opinion whether he's good or bad. That would be![]()
Julius was the MIP during the regular season -- then arrived at the playoffs as if he were a blind one-armed man on crutches who had never played the game. It was pathetic. One off game is understandable. Two off-games is not great on the pro level, but tolerable. FIVE bad games in a row in the biggest games of your career is inexcusable. No team would tolerate that from their "franchise" player -- and nor should they.
If you believe fans should never flip-flop their support of a player, then a player should never flip-flop showing up to a game when the team and the entire city are counting on them and needs them most.
When you do that though you lose credibility cause you’ll just hop back on his jock, if he learns from this experience and becomes a great big game player and hop right off when he fails at the next challenge.