Harry Garris wrote:Exp0sed wrote:such a horrible coddled generation
not everyone obviously
but Murray is a great example of that
good player but entitlement is just oozing out of him
he's talking like a 3 time champion when he hasn't accomplished all that much
but u pay a young kid 100M+ to play basketball and be ultra famous so that's what ya get
Tony Parker was kinda famously not the greatest teammate.
If he said Tim Duncan wasn’t a great mentor figure I’d have more questions about Dejounte’s judgement.
Similar thoughts as well.
Even Stephen Jackson agreed with him on that. Had it been Manu, who Jack also agreed was a great teammate, then it would've been some concern there.
What I got from what he said was that the Spurs drafted him, but likely questioned his character. They proceeded to start him over Tony because he was younger, a talented player, and he also put in a lot of work in the off-season.
So effectively, those things outweighed his character concerns. This inturn leads to his disappointment with TP for not wanting to be there to mentor him. Seems like Murray was expecting TP to be happy for him, and be happy to pass the torch.
There was some entitlement, but not as egregious as it's being made out to be. If anything, you could say he respected TP, and wished he would've stayed to help him progress since TP was closing in on the end of his career. Again, passing the torch.
I will say TP didn't owe him anything, but I can see Murray's point coming from the enviroment he came from. It's usually a "me against the world" mindset, and Tony was basically against him at that point.
Call it what you want, but if Duncan made this exact statement about Robinson, we'd probably see people uplifting Duncan and saying he will still go on to be a great player.