- Mar 30, 2010
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No one is 'trying hard', I'm simply pointing out the inherent flaws in that perspective. If playing/coaching in the NBA is a privilege, then so is being the commissioner of the NBA. It's not like Stern created the NBA and hired all the players and coaches to work for him. The NBA would be nowhere without its great organizations and coaches - coaches, like Popovich, who have earned their name by making decisions about what's best for their team basketball-wise. The integrity of the game comes from guys like Pop.My dude you are trying tooooo hard.
Yes the NBA promotes and markets individual players. We all know this. This is fact. Pop has been allowed to do his job. He actually did a great job tonight. His job is substitutions, play calls, and gamesmanship. Thats why he's there. If a coach has GM responsibilities then that's his job too. Stern hasn't limited any of those "rights"
If you are healthy you play. The league has been ok with teams doing this before playoffs or at the end of the season. But in Dec where every team is still technically in the race for the playoffs you dont do that.
Playing and coaching in the NBA is a privilege. Don't mess with the intergrity or quality of the product. Don't send 5 healthy players home and cause them to miss a game on National TV. Theres a respect thing.
Lets say your boss lets anybody who wants to leave work 45 mins early on Fridays. Some people do it. Some people don't. Its not a big issue because its just some Fridays. Then this one Friday your boss's boss is there to look over the place. It would be in poor taste for 3 of you guys to walkout and leave early in front of the big boss. It makes your boss look bad and it makes you guys look bad. Why not just suck it up this one Friday and stay until the real time to show your boss respect. I mean he has been letting you guys leave early on other Fridays right? But NOOO you had to make him look bad and now he has to put in writing some rule about leaving early because of people took advantage of the favor.
Your work analogy doesn't apply here because leaving work early isn't part of your job. It's part of an NBA coach's job to strategically manage players minutes throughout the season, which is what Pop was doing. Of course respect comes into play in any workplace. But your primary responsibility is always to do the job you were contracted to do, to the best of your ability; if Pop made decisions based on how respectful they were he wouldn't be where he is today. Stern could have contacted the Spurs privately and let them know that he was unhappy, or sent out a memo in the offseason discouraging teams from doing this. But issuing a fine (if that is indeed what happens) is an overextension of power.
The Spurs starters were sore and he wanted them to be 100% for an important conference matchup, so he rested them for a game. Why should he risk one of them straining a muscle due to cramps or fatigue? That's his call and he should be allowed to do that. It would be different if they were a bad team, because then it could possibly look like they were conspiring to tank the season. But this is clearly a strategic move and he's doing what he is paid to do.
What precedent would possibly be set? You do realize Popovich has been doing this for a while now, right?I'm not even as mad about this as I was last night. As long as this doesnt set the precedent for something worse then I'm fine. Let Stern have his power trip this one time and leave it at that.
It's not like this will become a widespread trend throughout the league, your team would have to be very good to earn the luxury of doing this. The only potential problem I could see is if a top team were to do this for the Christmas Day game.. but as far as I know the NBA doesn't generally give teams long roadtrips or 4 games in 5 days around the holidays, so I doubt it'd ever be an issue.
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