I'm basing this post on an experience I recently had - after the lockout ended, I saw 4-5 people on Facebook (not close friends) saying things like "Oh great, thug life reunion" "Greedy thugs are back to 'work'" and "Thugball is back I guess".
What boggled my mind wasn't just the use of these terms, but that all of these guys were big NFL fans. I pointed out to a couple of them that NFL players have been involved in far more "thuggish" behavior than NBA players, like:
- "Making it rain" in a strip club, then trying to take the money back, and assaulting a stripper and shooting up the place afterward (Pac-Man Jones)
- Running over and killing a pedestrian while inebriated (Donte Stallworth)
- Killing a woman in a car crash while intoxicated, then getting ANOTHER DUI later (Leonard Little)
- Bringing a loaded gun, tucked into sweatpants, into a club then shooting himself in the leg with it (Plaxico)
- Running an illegal dogfighting ring (Vick)
- Trafficking cocaine (Jamal Lewis, Travis Henry) and marijuana (Jerome Simpson, Anthony Collins)
- Multiple rape accusations (Ben Roethlisberger)
- Having many children by many different mothers (Cromartie, Travis Henry)
- Felony domestic assault (Chris Cook)
Etc, etc - but it didn't seem to make a difference. They described the NFL players as being isolated incidents and restated what "dumb greedy thugs" the NBA players were, despite the fact that incidents like these have been very few and far between in the NBA, and extremely common in the NFL (and MLB/NHL to a lesser degree).
If an NBA player had been involved in any of these, I have no doubt that many people would tout it as "proof" of how the NBA is "full of thugs", and yet the NFL seems immune to this kind of label. Heck, when the All-Star weekend was in Vegas, the only major incident involved an NFL player (Pac-Man), but I STILL heard people talking about the "NBA thugs taking over Vegas".
So, what is it about the NBA that keeps the "thug" label stuck to them, and away from the NFL? It can't just be race - is it really something as basic as how visible the players are with their uniforms, or the more individual vs team nature of the sports? I could maybe understand it from a non-sports fan, but from football fans in particular, it seems totally irrational.