Hoodwink wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:Hoodwink wrote:[
Nice self righteous post there, bud.
I mean let’s choose to ignore what happened to Knicks excec Anucha Browne Sanders, Knicks intern with Malbury, The Mavericks FO, and probably other NBA teams with dirty laundry while we’re at it.
Let’s put young, impressionable teens (drafts out of high school and some being from the hood) around young authoritative females. I’m sure that’s going to work out and they’ll teach them how to be men. I’m not saying it can’t happen but you’d be an idiot not to see that potential disaster.
But your solution seems to be to deny opportunity to a potential, theoretical victim. That's wrong on every level.
Mavs' business culture was flat trash. Some small consolation as a fan that it didn't carry over to the basketball side. But the right answer would be to clean house and change the culture, not refuse to hire more women because Pants DJ and Earl K Sneed were perverts, right?
I'm stunned that you guys hold this position. I try and see things from every perspective but I just can't get there with you'll on this.
The NBA is a sport made up of 100% men. Men not women. When there comes a day when a female/trans enters the NBA my viewpoint will change.
Ask yourself one question. The NBA is but an infant when compared to the EPL, La liga, NFL, NHL, MLB etc. How many women do you see in power in any of these sports? How many women play in any of these leagues as players? I’m not saying things shouldn’t change or progress shouldn’t be made but somethings can be awkward for the players especially the younger ones from rougher backgrounds.
Your old man of a coach screaming and belittling you when you don’t hustle on defense is different from a young women screaming and belittling you in front of other grown men. It’s technically the same..but it’s also different on how it’s received and perhaps more infuriating/embarrassing.
I liken it to this; I as a man have a problem with my sexual organ, I feel awkward and uncomfortable speaking to a female physician, (qualified as she may be) than a male physician. It’s honestly just more relatable.
Yes, we as men have done wrong and can be better...but don’t be afraid of being a man.
Well, first of all I think that what you want and your comfort level with physicians is a personal choice, so if you feel more comfortable with male doctors that's perfectly fine. Me personally outside of my old pediatrician (who was awesome), most my doctors have been women. I just feel more comfortable and at ease.
It seems like you have the mentality of someone who thinks women would be better suited sitting at home rearing children then out in the work force or in this case, getting opportunities in male dominated sports. I'm not saying that to insult you because I don't think you're coming from a place of malice, but it seems like this is where you're headed with this. We have men coaching in women's sports leagues and no one bats an eye, but for some reason with women coaching and instructing men, guys have issues with it and I just don't get it. It's fragility at it's finest...if someone is qualified and can instruct and teach you things that can improve you in your craft...why not listen to them? It really is weird to me that dudes have these hang ups, as if they feel emasculated or something when it's nothing of the sort. You should read what Pau Gasol, an NBA Champion and a 1st ballot hall of famer, wrote about Becky Hammon and her coaching of him.
You're also stereotyping players that come from poor urban areas, acting as if dudes from the hood won't or cannot take instruction or guidance from women...which would be ironic since a lot of single family households in those areas are headed by women. You're either projecting or you have a really low opinion on minority athletes from poor areas. For every ass hole player that comes from a bad area there are 10 guys that aren't.
Also, I don't know what being for equal opportunity and treating women with respect have to do with "being afraid of being a man". To me, not being threatened by women earning opportunities is being more of a man than sitting there wanting to gatekeep women from advancing in various fields, either it be sports or otherwise.
Please consider donating blood:
https://www.nybc.org/2025-2026 Indiana Pacers C: J. Valanciunas/C. Castleton
PF: K. Kuzma/J. Robinson-Earl
SF: T. Evbuomwan/J. Howard
SG: T. Hardaway Jr./C. Williams
PG: C. Payne/J. Springer