Red8911 wrote:dougthonus wrote:Red Larrivee wrote:
Any player accomplishing what Rose did in 4 seasons is still extremely rare in the NBA. It doesn't matter that injuries derailed everything.
It depends on how specific you are being. Rose delivered two really great regular seasons and one good playoff run where we got to the ECF. There are a whole host of players that have done that and not gotten their jersey retired. The MVP is really what sets him apart from the uniqueness perspective, but if you remove that reward, what he did is not even remotely close to special ore jersey retirement worthy.
He falls well short of the typical criteria required for a jersey retirement in terms of number of productive years and post seasons results.
But again, unique case. He's only the second MVP with the Bulls, and his peak was amazing and he had a special connection to the city, and has lack of longevity was not his fault and was tragic. I'd retire his jersey too, but I could see the case either way.
Letās be honest even though Rose was MVP that season LeBron was still the best player then and he proved it to him and us once they met in the ECF.
This is coming from someone who loved Rose and hates LeBron. Regular season MVPs or records donāt mean sht if you donāt follow it up in the playoffs.
The context is important. LeBron left the Cavs and joined the Heat to create, arguably, the first free agency produced "super team". Certainly that was the rhetoric at the time. LeBron had to be extra special that season and, despite all the star power, they finished with a worse record than the Bulls. LeBron had better stats but it didn't result in a more successful regular season. The debate was between D Rose and Dwight, but the Magic finished 4th in the EFC that year. Realistically, Thibs was the MVP.
Furthermore, the fact that he's from Chicago is important regardless of what some on this board think. It's more than a game and Derrick's success was inspirational to a lot of kids born into a worse situation than you. I'm glad race-derived poverty doesn't apply to you, but it's insensitive to think it isn't important and socially beneficial. Or that people might have a connection to their home and aren't simply wayward and rootless.
My thing about D Rose was the rape trial that many seemingly forgot about (except you). Sure, it was a civil case and he "got off" on it, but clearly it's an example of a powerful man coercing a woman into bizarre sex acts she probably didn't want to do ("consensual" sex with your family members is still weird, dawg). I mean, you can say 'no', right, but there are certainly more factors at play even if it's not by-the-book, go-directly-to-jail rape. He did not come out looking good from it even if there wasn't enough evidence to prove that a rape occurred. "We men" is a timeless quote.
He has a complicated legacy, I think they should retire his jersey for 'on the court' reasons, but I feel like the 'off court' stuff really soured my view of him and I'm of the opinion the team shouldn't be endorsing this. Nobody seems to care about Kobe's indiscretions and he actually 'settled', implicit guilt, whereas D Rose won his case. Kobe was a much bigger dick in other regards too whereas Rose has always had the persona of a nice, humble dude (whether it's the truth or not...he also seems pretty simple).
I think both the Bulls and Sox have gone a different direction in terms of condoning these things and I'm not such a fan of it. Why did the Sox sign and then re-sign Mike Clevinger just to pitch to a 5 ERA on the AAA team, and then lie about knowing the allegations against him? I don't think any other team in the NBA was touching Giddey with a 10-foot pole, his lack of interest this offseason despite good stats seems to continue to speak to that. How about the sexual assault case against Omar Vizquel put forward by an autistic batboy that he settled on; why is Jerry Reinsdorf's personal mouthpiece, Bob Nightengale, trying to rehabilitate him?
Maybe all of these things are debatable or hearsay or whatever else, but in summation, it reflects poorly on the organization in my opinion. We weren't hearing about this stuff a decade ago, our issue as fans seemed to be "they care about personal character too much and they should just sign good players" and now it's just guys with sketchy pasts who are barely even difference-makers.