In the past week, we were hit with another perfect example of why Pete Rose has yet to sniff Cooperstown. Depending on our allegiances, we sports fans will put up with just about anything. Michael Vick still has his supporters, as do Pacman Jones and Barry Bonds. But blindside the American public with a revelation that the playing field wasn’t level, and that we were fooled in the process? Different story, indeed. When we learn that we put stock into a competition where the outcome may have been unduly and unnecessarily influenced, we don’t take it too well. Once a shred of credibility is attached to a falsified outcome, conspiracy theories run amok. Whether it’s a fixed game or the JFK assassination, they are there, although most are simply too far-fetched, too over the top, or can be made to sound far too convenient. What fueled the fire of the problem, of course, is that doubt was created in the first place.
At his recent press conference regarding Tim Donaghy, David Stern appeared as we’d never seen him before; a defendant painted into a corner on the witness stand, rather than the confident-some would say over confident-head of the NBA. Stern has been lauded often for his achievements as commissioner, though one has to wonder how difficult it must have been to take over a league that had already had the kick-start of a lifetime courtesy of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, who were entering their prime, and was about to add a soon-to-be-superstar named Michael Jordan in Stern’s first season.
Critics of Stern would cite things such as a sometimes arrogant and condescending manner, (witness his interview with Dan Patrick on ESPN radio during the Suns-Spurs series, which, in a classic bit of irony, came roughly a week after Donaghy officiated game three), his staunch position that his officials were the most well-trained, best qualified, and most highly monitored in all of sports, and his tendency to sound as though he was lecturing us feeble-minded basketball fans. And those critics wouldn’t be too far off on any of these.
Without a doubt, NBA basketball is the most difficult to officiate of all the major team sports. Nearly every call, from traveling to three seconds to almost every foul, is a judgment call, and being an NBA referee is an unenviable task indeed. However, Stern’s unconditional defense, or should I say outright praise, of his referees in the past has grated on many. Especially since the product on the floor has not measured up, in the opinion of the vast majority of fans. And when one takes into consideration his decisions regarding the situations of some of his officials in recent history, i.e., the cash-for-first-class-tickets and some bouts with tax evasion, his track record suddenly becomes very ordinary. I’m all for giving folks a second chance, but since Stern tried to convince us ad nauseum that his league’s standards were much higher, one has no choice but to come to the conclusion that Stern did not meet his own verbalized standards. On the credibility scoreboard, he needs a slump-buster.
Stern said in his press conference, “I feel betrayed by what happened on behalf of the sport, regardless of how protective I’ve been.” Two observations come to mind. First, at least he admitted he’s been protective. We all knew it, and he’s now acknowledging it. That’s a start. Secondly, he is not the only one who feels betrayed. NBA fans do too. And when all is said and done, we are the ones who dictate the success of his league. With the finals ratings spiraling downward, Mr. Stern cannot afford to misstep on this one. Since some cynics will say, for example, that Mr. Stern is more of the problem rather than the solution, since it may come out and be verified that Donaghy had prior gambling issues that the league knew about, Stern is now in a zero tolerance position.
Stern’s new ball didn’t work out very well. Neither did his own zero tolerance answer to players, coaches and in some cases owners, who complained about the quality of officiating, only to have Stern respond with quicker technical fouls being called and even stiffer fines for the critics. His “best officials in all of sports” never were, and it was downright laughable that he consistently preached otherwise. Mr. Stern is living in our world now, his attention diverted towards trying to figure out how to fix a game that once was great, (and that a great game was only once fixed?), rather than trying to convince us that all is well, and how dare we infer otherwise. And if the trade off is his paying less attention to what his players wear off the court and more to the legitimacy of the game on the court, I will gladly take it. If another trade off is the ceasing of his convoluted view of the quality of officiating for a consistent, unbiased application of the rule book, I’ll take that too. In a heartbeat. It’s what we’ve all been yearning for all along.
We may learn down the road that the problem runs deeper than “A rogue, isolated criminal,” as Stern said in reference to Donaghy in the press conference. He also said that it was limited to only one, as far as he knew. But a couple months ago he would have STERN-ly admonished us for implying that there was even one doing it. For the sake of you and the league, Mr. Stern, I certainly hope you’re right this time. The ball--the classic leather version hopefully--is in your court. Now tap into those millions of dollars in fines you’ve collected and address an upgrade in officiating. It's unfortunate it's taken this dilemma for you to do so, but at least the funds will be put to good use.
Nice write Ricko
Do you think that the league will refund the fines that were given to those who complained about the officating were Donaghy was involved?
Honestly Ricko, officiating has never been perfect. The only difference is we have complain more, look for excuses, and have a lot more technology to catch those little slips.
pump-Rasheed Wallace and Mark Cuban are going through box scores looking at which games he worked as we speak.
ulanj-No one's asking for perfection. But some painfully obvious calls are missed (carrying the ball, for example) while others are not called consistently. Let's face it, stars get more calls. And I don't care how you-not you personally, just people in general-try to justify it, is isn't right. And a guard gets away with things a big man doesn't, and vice versa. That's all I'm saying. I know it's been that way for years and years, but that still doesn't make it right.
Ricko....gotta tell ya, this read had me riveted. good points on him inheriting the league while it was rolling.
I read that Donaghy was being investigated by a PI last year, and when the neighbors admitted he did gamble, Stern still let him officiate in the playoffs, screwing the Suns and others.
Stern has blinders on. Most commishes do, it seems. If they have have tougher policies, why are more and more players getting into trouble?
Finally, Donaghy a rogue? No way, Mr Stern.
If you see one cockroach in your kitchen, there's 10 more. all you have to do is turn out the lights so no one can see them....they will come out. Donaghy is the tip of the iceberg.
I just love reading your stuff. In essence part of stern and hisways , which could bepercieved as a spirallydown league with over the topplayers. It's no wonder that I've stopped watching NBA for about 12 years or so.It became uninteresting. Problems began to grow and my attention span dwindled.
lisa-Thanks so much for the accolades. I agree about more "rogues" being made known. Perhaps that's why Stern was crapping all over himself at the presser? His holier-than-thou schtick was old before, and I hate to say it, but it all comes back in the end. One more thing-I know you write a lot of blogs. I apologize that I don't have time to check them out very often. I'll try to do better, but I just haven't had the time lately. Again, thanks a million for the comments.
rooster-You took the words right out of my mouth with the towel comment. And I hope for the NBA's sake that it's just a coincidence that Donaghy hired an attorney who's represented whistle-blowers in the past. Figuratively, of course. And thanks a ton for the praise.
Marty-Thanks man. Isn't it amazing how NBA fans have basically been numbed over the years when it comes to subpar officiating? It's like it's been going on for so long, we've subconsciously accepted it. What I found interesting in game 3 was that the announcers actually criticize the refs, which I had come to believe was an unwritten rule or something.
Did you say you were going to cut and paste this?? Oh, never mind. Print and frame. Cool. Thanks again, man.
lisa, rooster, and Marty-Had a long, tiring day today. Thanks for nice comments to read when I got home.
Thanks Rev. I know you two have had this series going on for a couple weeks now. My sincere apologies for not taking or making the time to check it out. But I'm heading there right now for a look-see.
You know what the worst part of all of this is? Jerry Colangelo. The guy put this town on the map sports-wise way back when. His contributions were enormous, and I don't feel like he got his just due. I predicted back in March he would finally see the fruits of his labor. Not to be, I guess.
As a Phx resident and Suns fan, thanks for writing an open-minded read, realistic of problems in the NBA and with Stern's management, but not inviting more inflammed comments about this year's playoffs.
Stern's reign in the NBA began with your very accurate statement: that one has to wonder how difficult it must have been for Stern to take over a league that had already had Magic, Bird, with Jordan entering in Stern’s first season. This was the beginning of "the individual and the team" basketball: Jordan and the Bulls, LeBron and Cavs, Kobe and the Lakers. Arrogance and star power (Sterns and players) flourished under Stern's tenure as commisioner.
In addition, his method of hiring, teaming and training referees, as reported by retired referee Mike Mathison, was one of cronyism - the good old boys network - where friends and friends of friends were hired. No training, teaching or accountability. Do Stern's business methods go completely unchecked and what were the owner's doing when this was going on?
When the NBA had Donaghy investigated for gambling, and his neighbors confirmed he did, do you really believe there was no security camera footage in the casino in Atlantic City that could have verified him being there?
When Stern talks about the NBA, he always talks about how great the fans are. But he clearly shows disregard for fans in running a questionable referee program, chosing egotistical star power over team concept, and especially his recent condescending attitude when approached about any questionable action.
Stern used his legal training in his news conference on Tuesday to portray himself as the wronged commissioner, a victim. But he is responsible for putting safeguards into place for preventing problems such as these from occuring. He failed -- both personally and professionally.
gojimmy-thanks for the comments. I'll echo all you said. I touched on it only briefly in the article, but part of me has felt for some time now that he's part of the problem, not the solution. Glad I'm not the only one who felt he was arrogant and condescending.
Good point about the difficulty of officiating NBA games - never really thought about that.
There is a big, big difference between making a wrong call accidentally and making a bogus call on purpose. You mentioned the fact that fans feel betrayed, and I agree, but do you think fans are forgiving enough to place complete trust in officals again or will it take time and will there always be doubts in the minds of fans?
Do you think the Knicks lost all those games because of the refs because I am starting to think that? hahahaha.
Last edited by rwemersonrw on July 29th at 6:39 PM.
Hard to say about the fans' trust. I guess it depends on what else comes out of this story. As for the Knicks, I don't think any amount of officiating can help them right now. Or make them much worse than they already are. Can't blame you for wondering though.
Awesome post. Mr. Stern has a lot of #### scooping to do. Regarding the referees, officiating a basketball game is very tough. However, it is tougher as the athletes are faster, stronger, bigger and the referees are older slower and have alleged outside interests. It is my hope this will cause a serious re-evaluation of the referees and the way the game is called.
nate-Thanks. Love your #### scooping line. And agree with all the rest. Damn shame it would take this to improve the officiating, but damn, Stern's arrogance got old with me long ago. Thanks for stopping by.
I think Edhardiman scribbled it best on the subject of the JFK assassination being a public suicide and not an assassination at all.................LOL!
As much as I would hate to be in agreement with Mark Cuban on anything. Stern should be,........."Well" stern and send a message to all officials. The bar needs to be raised and not only in the NBA.
Master, I'm trying to figure out which Fighting Sioux jersey to pick up. Have a preference?
This week, I ordered a Johnny Rogers jersey, bought two boxes of cigars(REO and VIBE), and went to the office each day. The last gets harder every day. I need a sugar mama.
What year did you escape NDak?
Last edited by slshusker on August 5th at 11:04 AM.
I'd go traditional, the Fighting Sioux circa '83, if possible. The green away jersey with the Indian head on the front. I assume you're talking about hockey.
Hi Ricko-Nice job with this. Short of getting someone on tape or a confession this charge would be really hard to prove. There is so much contact on each play that you can just about call or not call at your discretion and control the spread. It's like having a printing machine for bills.
I agree Duds-And like I said, the NBA game is the hardest to officiate. But I guess I'm speaking for many when I reiterate the sub-par officiating that's gone on for years. The major problem I have with it is that it has come to be accepted as the norm. By many fans. The solution? Not sure I have one. But I am sure that David Stern proclaiming his crew the best is not the answer. I don't know why, for the life of me, he has not been called out before. If I may be a little cynical for a moment, he's as big a stooge as Selig is. And if I may be extremely blunt, I don't know why those guys decided they could f*** with our games.
Call me crazy, but pro golf is currently the best sport on the planet. I've been severely disappoined while watching, but never at an official's bad call.
Spent half my life in North Dakota. The other half, so far, in the Valley of the Sun. As a kid, I was always playing, watching, reading, or writing about sports. I lost most of the "playing" along the way, but the rest remains the same. I pledge to refrain from commenting on a blog unless I've read it in its entirety. If I have time, of course.
Carry on.
Email address: rickoblog@ear thlink.net