i like the game of basketball.
I love my Clippers.
but man this NBA is ran much more like a hedge fund managing financial institution rather than a sports league.
unlike baseball where talented kids gets drafted whether they are coming from Stanford or a little town barnyard high school games, NBA cares so much about its BRAND that they now mandate people to have a title of a well known division 1 school. if NBA actually cared about its employees' education, they would mandate that the players actually go to school and finish a degree but no, all it needs is a year of school just to say the kid went to that name brand school. what does that got to do with a kid's talent to play a game of basketball?
of course Adam Silver and his board of directors get a massive kickback from NCAA for providing them with a total monopoly of talent supply. only way to get drafted in NBA is to go to one of these NCAA schools and sell their jerseys first. they do say having played internationally counts, but it is very rare for a 17 year old kid playing in some obscure high school league to get that kind of exposure to go aboard in the first place, and most international teams do not have much scouting here in USA either.
NBA is the only league that fines its players for what they are wearing on the bench or in and around the arena. has MLB ever fined Brian WIlson for his sleeveless shirt and mountain man beard attire?
NBA does not cater to an average Joe, although it is average Joes who support their product. NBA wants to sell to affluent families who come to arena a half a dozen times or more per year, sitting on expensive seats as family of 4, spending money on food and drinks and kids get their souvenirs at the ridiculously marked up in house shops for the parents to feel good about giving their kids a good time. if they can wrestle season tickets for family of 4? now NBA has achieved its ultimate goal. you love the NBA but don't spend at least a grand per visit? they don't need you. there are millions like you out there who will come to that one game a season at the upper deck, saving money on parking by parking away from the arena or taking a bus. you may love your team, but your contribution to the franchise and the league is only valued at what you spend.
Ironically, as the socio-economics of NBA's targeted demographic moves upwards, their understanding of the game of basketball nosedives. the game of basketball is, after all, an urban sports where inner-city kids who do not have a baseball field or football field in their neighborhoods to gather and play at anybody's driveway, in the streets, or behind any building with just a wall, hoop, and concrete floor. the same supply of the talent the NCAA or NBA pools in from is coming form these very alleyways, driveways, local parks, and behind industrial buildings. but NBA cannot sell this BRAND to the affluent suburb dwelling high purchasing power demographics. so what do they do? instead of saying, "look, that is Baron Davis from South Central LA", or "hey, there is Gary Payton from East Oakland" they manufacture and reBRAND them into "look, that's Baron Davis out of UCLA" and "hey there is Gary Payton from Oregon State". all the while, NCAA makes money while doing NBA's dirty work of re-imaging and re-branding these kids into something they often are not, college level students. otherwise what is the hype behind Jeremy Lin? an Asian American kid from an affluent neighborhood of silicon valley, who attended Harvard with his own grades and gradated, shouldn't be a big deal if every athlete in NBA were able to get into the schools they are from with their own academic merits, is there? after all, UCLA, Duke, Georgetown, Berkley, Udubb, and countless others are great academic institutions that are not very far behind at all from the Ivy League schools. of course, it is a big deal because we all know that there are a lot more Eric Bledsoes in NBA who have not so clean academic history and proper merits for their eligibilities than there are Jeremy Lins. don't get me wrong, I love me some Eric Bledsoe. still would have loved to kept him on our roster.
anyhow, since fabricating grades which have worked for so long are now getting investigated when public is made aware of such academic frauds, we see time to time the people in charge of these university athletics get fired. whenever it happens, it's not good for the college teams coaches, the athletic directors, the board members, and ultimately the reputation of those universities suffer. so what's the new scheme? make college mandated, but only for 1 year, so academic ineligibility won't become an issue when kids can't pass on their own at UCLA, U of North Carolina or U of K when in fact these kids barely scored 700 on SAT on their third try.
but do people really care where their athletes come from? Clayton Kershaw is a two time cy young winner, a well known humanitarian and a humble young man who is now worth about 300 million. he came straight from a high school in Texas. Wayne Gretzky was playing professional hockey before he could even turn 18. not even sure if Wayne has a high school diploma at all.
then what gives?
I think the answer is pretty obvious and right in our faces. the affluent fans of the NBA or any major sports in North America uses terms like a "enforcer" or"tough as nails" when they see a non threatening face where as the same type of players who happened to be black, will be called a "thug", or "gangster". it was incredibly telling when America got to hear what football players really say on the field when Richard Sherman was caught on his ranting after the NFC championship game earlier this year, they collectively called him a "thug". Richard Sherman, was talking tough, and crazy, sports his long dreadlocks, happens to be black. he also happens to be a graduate of Stanford University with a degree in communications, graduated with honors and went back to school for his masters degree and he finished his undergraduate studies earlier than his athletic eligibility to play football. if anything, this young man is an academic scholar.
I am not calling the upper middle America racist. but we have our stereotypes and tendencies. David Stern saw that and manufactured Magic vs Bird, to engage the whites into a sport that is predominantly played by blacks from urban upbringing. Am I saying Magic and Bird weren't any good? Not at all. they were great. but If Magic was drafted by Utah Jazz instead of the Lakers, and Bird to Seattle Sonics instead of the Celtics, things wouldn't be the same. Magic without his supporting cast, and Larry without his supporting cast, wouldn't be the same. but most of all, NBA's manipulation of the game through refereeing, gave just enough push for these two teams to continue their colliding and legends were made, ratings went up, and the economically viable American middle class embraced the game of basketball. Now the target demographics has moved up from middle class to upper middle class. this is only reflective of our social changes in much larger scale, the death of American Middle Class that we are witnessing today.
as the fans the NBA is targeting is changing to more financially capable but less basketball savvy, casual crowd, Adam Silver and his minions are carrying on the legacy of David Stern with not so subtle approach, and frankly, I don't let an NBA playoff games' results bother me much anymore. did we lose because NBA wanted us to lose? not entirely. we had plenty of our chances, as we are clearly the better team. but did NBA have its dirty hands to change the odds, maybe more than a little? you bet.
either way, I take my fandom with a dash of cynicism and put everything in perspective.
of course when the same thing happens with my Dodger baseball, i tend to lose my mind but that's a whole different story.

this was a whole lot about nothing, really, but I do wish that NBA becomes more of a sports league than a sports entertainment entity.
ehhhhh f it.