Ive written this elsewhere but I just have to say this. The statistics are just the details but this is the essence of my issue with all this.
I used to watch the NBA religiously growing up and unfortunately didnt get to do so for the past decade on account of moving/living in Sweden. I wasn't even a Celts fan when I left, I was a hardcore Bulls fan from 85 to 00. My pops was the Cs fan so I guess I thought it was cool to route against Bird and the Cs. Decided to switch allegiances since I was already a Pats and Soxs fan a few years into the 00s. I just identified more with being a New Englader after moving away. I needed to mature to appreciate the Celts I guess.
Now that I am back and having watched this I can honestly say with a little bit of objectivity, that this isn't the same league I watched growing up. It has massive problems with its refs and obviously when money is an important issue in tough economic times I really question its integrity from top to bottom. Things happen all over the place that Ive never been witness to.
With everything else that is going down currently in this country with Wall St. and the rich guys working over the little guy I think its probably dangerous to entertain any form of idealism. It is an amazing disappoint me for me not in the fact the Cs didn't win a title, I am too old to get too worked up over sweaty men throwing a rubber ball through a hoop but in the fact that as a thinking person it wasn't even possible to get away for a while with a sport I grew up playing and love to death. Its a microcosm of the much larger malaise and chicanery. And that's something I can get worked up over and dont mind drawing attention to.
Excellent post. I agree. Idealism feels shaky in a world where Enron insiders talk about screwing over grannies in California.....
I also want to say I understand and appreciate the ref supporters. This is definitely one of those issues that creates fuzzy pictures all around, and I think both sides are needed in order to move forward with legitimacy....
All I know is that after this series I don't see the fans being the #1 priority. There is definitely some sort of other priority blob that's hovering in our midst, and it's getting plenty of stroke-filled attention....
I believe in this because it just wasn't there before, but now it is.....
The difference isn't the product. It is the press and our decreased trust. The press gets ratings by creating controversy where there is none. We have forums like this where even the most bizarre views can have a voice. We have blogs that can spew nonsense with no accountability.
We put all warts under microscopes now, even warts that aren't actually there, in a way people didn't do back in the day.
This is true too. But it's kind of side by side what I'm talking about. I'm not thinking in terms of conspiracy against the Celtics, financial conspiracy or Boston hatred on the part of Stern, nothing like that. What I'm thinking about is that refs have fallen into a trap and they themselves don't know how to extricate themselves from it. The trap I'm talking about is the temptation to over control what's in front of them. They simply no longer have the tools that refs of the past seemed to possess and use with ease, such as finding a way to be subtle, finding a way to be consistent, disappearing on the big stage instead of saying: Here I am!
The NBA and its rules ruined a fantastic series between the Suns and Spurs a few years back because a player stepped onto the court after a brutal foul on one his players. That rule I believe was instituted after the fight in Detroit instigated by a drink pouring idiot, who thanks to his abuse of his of own freedom caused a brawl and the rule changes that followed. But the rule changes were a reactionary mistake. When you have something good, don't squeeze the life out of it due to a bonehead who feels like inserting himself into the action by dumping his drink. I'd rather they put a fence around the court than change the rules and reduce on-court freedom. So the when the frequency of whistle blows suddenly explodes in the 4th quarter of a game 7, I have to think that these refs have been led astray by poor leadership, reactionary measures, and fear of the real (emotion?).
That may be what I'm getting at. The fight in Detroit was real (let's call it an ugly episode of reality). So the league's response was: Okay, we better swing over to the manufactured side of life and keep this real stuff as far away as possible....
A win or a loss for the Celts, the bizarre whistle increase represents the safe and cuddly choosing of something packaged over something real that unfolds naturally.