The NBA’s America
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
"Most
athletes, they hunger for the Olympics every four years. They
spend their lives wanting to get there and that's what they want
to do. But we're different. We've just finished an 82-game season
and we want to chill out."
~
Seattle SuperSonics guard Ray Allen
on why NBA players should be paid to play in the Olympics
In
my childhood, I spent many an evening watching professional basketball
games with my father. Having been born and raised in Massachusetts,
he was a die-hard Boston Celtics fan. Together, we watched the glorious
rebirth of the Celtics in the 1980s with such luminaries as Larry
Bird and Kevin McHale. He would always reminisce about the legendary
Boston teams of the 1950s and the heroics of men like Bill Russell
and John Havlicek.
But
by the mid 1990s, he had stopped watching basketball altogether,
and a couple of years later, I followed suit.
I
was reminded of the wisdom of that choice the other evening while
at a friend’s house. He happened to be watching the NBA playoffs,
so I joined him for a while.
By
any reasonable standard, the NBA today is a squalid and obscene
mutation of what it once was. Having enjoyed the game in its better
days only makes its current status all the more painful.
The
violence, the obscenity, and the pompous arrogance that accompany
modern basketball have destroyed the sport for any respectable fan.
I’ve lost count of the number of news stories I’ve seen concerning
professional players and their assaults, weapons charges, and drug
convictions. And it hasn’t always been like this…there has been
an undeniable disintegration of standards across the league. (Can
anyone imagine Celtics great K.C. Jones trying to strangle Red Auerbach
at practice, à la Latrell Sprewell?)
To
make matters worse, many of them seem to be more concerned with
their music and film careers than with cultivating fan loyalty to
their team and the sport
Without
doubt, the rot that is the NBA finally came out into the open in
last year’s Olympic Games in Athens. There, the world got to see
a team full of players with 8-figure salaries loaf, bumble, and
curse their way to mediocrity. They finally stumbled their way to
a bronze medal after being defeated by several nations the size
of postage stamps.
The
reasons behind that pathetic performance were threefold and obvious:
First,
their opponents were playing the game as a team sport.
In
every game that the "dream team" played, they functioned
on the court as disjointed individuals. They spent most of their
playing time showboating and ball-hogging. Their offensive schemes
constantly broke down as egos clashed over their roles.
Unfortunately,
they were playing against teams that were drilled with the concept
of team play. Other countries don’t pamper their basketball stars
from adolescence. Consequently, their players were more willing
to pass the ball and sacrifice the spotlight for the greater goal
of winning the game.
Second,
their opponents concentrated on the fundamentals
This
point is closely linked to the lack of team play noted above. The
modern NBA version of the game encourages players to concentrate
on superfluous and egocentric stunts as opposed to the basics. They
are more concerned with how their 360 slam looks on the highlight
reel than whether anyone hustles back to play defense after the
score.
Tragically,
as the fan-base of the league has degenerated into a facsimile of
the Roman Coliseum’s mob (such as the specimen who started that
infamous chair-throwing brawl at the Pacers-Pistons game a few months
ago), the league obviously feels that it has to promote this sort
of play in order to keep the rabble buying tickets.
Third,
international referees call basketball games like they were originally
meant to be played.
Assault
and battery has become the standard method of defending against
a lay-up in the modern NBA. Though one would never know it from
watching contemporary games, basketball was originally created as
a sport with almost no physical contact. But the NBA has, again,
let the rules slide over the years because modern fans like to see
players get knocked around.
Unfortunately
for the US team, this ethos has not yet worked its way into the
international game. There, the officials are much more likely to
call a foul for such minor offenses as punching, kicking, and eye
gouging.
As
a result, several of the American team’s star players kept fouling
out in the early part of the games. It is tough to win when your
starting line-up is warming the bench halfway into the first period.
In
many ways, this performance was rather like an evil twin of the
US Hockey teams’ stunning upset victory in the 1980 Olympics.
Back
during that heroic series (which I still regard, to this day, as
the most emotionally uplifting sporting event I’ve ever seen), a
team of relative nobodies defeated the mighty Soviets and went on
to win the gold medal. In the process, they displayed major virtues
such as determination, teamwork, and courage.
America
of 1980 was a very different place, and that team reflected it in
many ways. Back then, the USA had come off several disasters (such
as Vietnam, the energy crisis, and the Iranian hostage crisis),
and was suffering from a serious case of self-doubt. Americans felt
as though their nation could do nothing right.
Into
that void stepped that hockey team. Their wonderful run for the
gold uplifted America and made us all feel better about ourselves.
Likewise,
the US basketball team at the Athens Olympics is also a reflection
of contemporary America. But today, America is a very different
society than it was in 1980. Our finances and foreign policy reflect
the belief that we are somehow "special" and that the
rules of history and economics no longer apply to us. America believes
that it can do anything it wants and somehow avoid the negative
consequences.
The
NBA’s play is marked by gratuitous violence and a vainglorious style
that reflects a monstrous and pampered egocentrism.
It
is, in short, the identical twin of America’s economic and foreign
policies.
Greek
mythology tells us that the Gods are always offended by hubris.
Those who indulge in it cry out to be knocked down a few pegs as
punishment. The dream team’s hubris earned it public humiliation
and a disappointing bronze medal.
Unfortunately,
the bill for our nation’s hubris has yet to come due.
May
20, 2005
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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