Doctor MJ wrote:AEnigma wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:I'm going a bit nuts right now with Jaylen Brown responding to his teammate Derrick White being named an Olympian by alleging a Nike conspiracy. Crackpot thinking and a selfish teammate. Great way to follow up a chip.
Nike has an inordinately high degree of input, and — despite the plus/minus indicators — it is indeed an absolute slap in the face for Jaylen to be disregarded for a
second lesser star on his own team, with no superior history with the organisation (or the head coach) and no real team need.
That said, Jaylen also should not be implicitly attacking a teammate as a means of soothing his own wounded ego. Imagine if any of the 2004-08 Pistons had publicly railed against Tayshaun making the Redeem team.
I mean, Grant Hill is the boss, and he's an actual basketball superstar who sold a ton of shoes...for Fila. The idea that he punted on his own assessment (along with coach Kerr's assessment) to please a company that he isn't working for, and isn't known for working for, is paranoid.
Maybe paranoid if this happens to be the first time you have ever heard anything about Nike influence in USA basketball.
Re: no real team need. Well I mean, White is a better shooter, features off-ball 3's as a bigger part of his game, and is a better overall defender than Brown in my assessment. If Team USA needed someone to be one the main volume scorers and were choosing between Brown & White I'm sure they'd have picked Brown, but of course, that was never going to be Team USA's situation because the foundation of the team was always going to be guys who already did that, and did that better than Brown.
Which could be said about White in comparison with multiple players on the team. Could be said about guys like Mikal Bridges or Paul George. Herb Jones if we emphasise defence more than shooting volume. Hell, why not KCP. There is not any real
reason why Derrick White is the perfect piece to replace Kawhi Leonard.
Where this looks bad for Jaylen is that his instinct was to complain about his teammate being selected over
him rather than congratulate that teammate for being selected at all.
Re: slap in the face to choose a lesser stature teammate over Brown. That's clearly how Brown feels, but that doesn't mean Brown's feelings were the intention. If Hill thought choosing White was making Team USA worse than choosing Brown and he did it anyway he should be fired...but typing those words I think makes clear how far-fetched all this sounds. Hill's not trying to sabotage Team USA, and he's not some vulnerable middle manager who needs the pay check. Sure it's possible that the suits at Nike were able to convince him of something untrue about basketball, but quite literally if anyone at Nike tried to make Grant Hill feel like he doesn't know basketball, I think they'd be shown the door pretty quickly.
The idea that every move is designed to maximise their medal chances falls apart the second we remember there are three non-NBA players on the team. Marketing and politics have been an intrinsic element of this going back at least to the Dream Team. That does not mean every snub or selection is dictated by a certain financial interest, but how about we not pretend it is “crackpot” thinking to accuse those long-existing financial interests of being able to put their thumb on the scale.
Jaylen can be understandably mad, and we can be understandably unsympathetic about a feud started when his buddy faced financial backlash for publicising ignorant beliefs.