Bishop45 wrote:heat4life wrote:Bishop45 wrote:
Previous charges were excessive too, there isn't a precedent for this type of punitive action. Dion's an idiot but it doesn't give us the moral authority to charge him twice for it. Heat's actions have real consequences too, but only Dion will pay that over
Excessive? Bish, no offense but why don't you try to scream and insult your boss and come back and tell us how that goes for you.
NBA players live in a world of guaranteed contracts and union memberships. Dion will appeal and at the end they will negotiate a settlement for his money. That's how it works in the NBA with suspensions. Unlike you or me, who would likely get fired for such actions, Dion will still get paid. Nothing excessive IMO when you are stuck with someone disruptive and insubordinate when suspensions are one of the few logical avenues for discipline.
At the end, he knows the Heat will not cut him due to his contractual obligations and there is no trade market for him. I don't think he is interested in helping himself with good behavior in order to facilitate a trade. At the end, i could see Miami cutting a deal with his agent so he can go home and still get full pay until hopefully someone takes him in a trade.
Yes excessive, when is the last time you've heard of a suspension and stay away from the team after the fact in the league? Whiteside had done worse than Dion and publicly, and never got anything worse than a fine and rightfully so.
The team can decide the length of any suspension just like Dion can appeal and argue against it. He seems OK with being away from the team otherwise I don't understand the continued behavioral issues. Whiteside was unprofessional but he was never suspended for insubordination. Two different offenses. At the end, there is likely more to this story than what we know which might explain what you consider excessive.
Don't give me these false equivalenicies of regular Joe's with regular jobs when the scenarios aren't even close to being the same. You, in fact highlight that they aren't the same... and they aren't, like on any level.
False equivalencies? Insubordination is insubordination on ANY job. The offense is the same everywhere. Where things differ are in how you handle those offenses. A regular job with no union is VERY different than a job with a union and that is not even taking in consideration contractual obligations in one over the other.
Every single charge was more than the norm, the first and the third more than twice. If we're holding everyone accountable for their actions, that's both reprehensible and unprofessional
How "excessive" can be debated and at the end is a matter of opinion. However, the only thing reprehensible and unprofessional is Dion's continued behavior, let's not ignore that. During his first suspension everyone was looking forward to having him back on the team, then he has an episode on the plane where everyone is like "WTF" and now, another episode where he lies about his absence with the team and then commits insubordination again? I mean, I hope you see the pattern here. His behavior is not only detrimental to the organization, but also his teammates. Fine, he is pissed off at the Heat organization, then at least respect your teammates and stop the distractions.