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  1. #1
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    Default SI on Jordan as an owner


  2. #2
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    Shit article. I'm not sure that guy even used google to research this article. He just happened to see that the Bobcats were 7-whatthefuckever and said... "hey wait a minute, doesn't Jordan own that team"

    Just horrible. In fact... I am gonna paste the whole article here so no one else gives this twat author a link click.

    Like many sports teams, the Charlotte Bobcats are caught in an argument between haters and homers. One group thinks the Bobcats are one of the worst teams in NBA history. Those are the homers. The haters think the Bobcats have been losing on purpose so they can get the No. 1 pick in the draft. The homers say "No, that's not fair. They really do suck this bad. They're not trying to suck; they just suck at trying."
    The Bobcats are 7-56 now, losers of 20 straight and on track to earn to the league's worst winning percentage in history (.106). And since the Bobcats clinched the worst record in the league a while back, I think it's fair to say that if they WERE tanking, they aren't tanking anymore, unless this is some perverse version of running up the score.
    This is the year of a packed 66-game schedule, of three games in three nights, of five games in seven nights, of coaches coaching to avoid overtime because their players are exhausted, of players seeing "DALLAS" on opposing jerseys and being confused because they thought they were in San Antonio. Everybody has flat nights, even more than normal. The entire schedule has been built so nobody loses 20 games in a row. Yet the Bobcats have done it, and the 20th loss may have been their most impressive: a 26-point home defeat to the 21-43 Kings.
    GALLERY: NBA's longest losing streaks
    If you didn't know, you would never believe it: The man in charge of this operation is the greatest competitor in basketball history. I want to grab Michael Jordan by the shoulders, shake him and ask: "What the heck happened to you?"
    When Jordan was a player, he would cut your lungs out, just so he could catch some fresh air. This is what separated him from the rest of the basketball world, both in his playing days and in our minds. Sure, he was a breathtaking athlete. But there have been a lot of great athletes in the NBA. He was incredibly skilled, but that wasn't what defined him. Jordan was better because he was built from different material. He had the will of Kobe Bryant without the selfish streak, the talent of LeBron James with 10 times as much self-assurance.
    Jordan scored 63 points on the Celtics when doctors wanted him to rest as he recovered from a broken foot. He beat the Jazz in the NBA Finals when he had a stomach flu. He scored 55 points at Madison Square Garden after coming out of retirement, when he was still not in basketball shape, because it was Madison Square Garden and he was Michael Jordan and that is just what he did.

    Once the game's greatest competitors, Michael Jordan has let his Bobcats become one of the worst teams in history.
    Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

    And look at him now. Jordan has been the worst kind of owner. He pays attention when he feels like it. He hires his cronies. (Rod Higgins, who works in the Bobcats' front office, was one of Jordan's first Bulls teammates. Even Larry Brown was a fellow member of the Tar Heel mafia, though at least Brown was a great coach.) He complains about the cost of doing business, like he thought he was buying a convenience store instead of an NBA team.
    Owners are fans with money. Some days, Jordan has been the guy who buys season tickets and leaves in the third quarter. On other days, he has literally been the guy who practices with the team because he feels like it.
    The Bobcats are worse than bad. They are cheap. They are boring. They have a retread coach (68-year-old Paul Silas), and very little hope on the roster. Their leading scorer, Corey Maggette, is 32. The rest of the team is young, which is the hope that teams sell when they don't have hope. Hey, we're young! So what? There are millions of young people in this country, and I wouldn't ask most of them to guard Kevin Durant.
    They are supposed to be building around two rookies, but you need a whole lot of faith to see Bismack Biyombo or Kemba Walker as a superstar. The Bobcats traded up for the seventh pick in the 2011 draft so they could pick Biyombo, who is shooting 49 percent. No, not from the field. From the free-throw line. Biyombo is supposed to be the next Ben Wallace. Well, we'll see.
    GALLERY: Good players turned bad execs
    The Bobcats used the ninth pick to take Walker. He was a wonderful college player at Connecticut, and he will have a nice NBA career, but you can't build a contending NBA team around Kemba Walker. They should have used the No. 7 pick on Brandon Knight, who went No. 8 to Detroit. Knight may or may not turn out to be a star. But he is taller, younger and is shooting better from three-point range (37.6 percent) than Walker is shooting from everywhere (37.1 percent).
    Jordan has been Charlotte's majority owner for only two years, but he was part-owner and "Managing Member of Basketball Operations" for four before that. This debacle is his. The Bobcats are Jordan's Folly, proof that no matter who you are or how high you rise, at some point life will step on your head.
    The NBA is invested in Jordan in so many ways. He is the game's most famous player, a minority owner, an expansion-team baron, a global icon and an enormous cultural influence. Jordan represents so many conflicts of interest, but the NBA doesn't really care about that. If Jordan wins, the NBA wins.
    If you had told me Jordan would be a bad owner, I would have understood. I could have seen him as Daniel Snyder or young George Steinbrenner, showing no patience, demanding too much of the wrong people, spending money recklessly, changing direction three times a day.
    But this ... this I can't believe.
    I don't know what Jordan thinks when he watches this mess. Maybe he dreams about getting Anthony Davis with the top pick. Maybe he tells himself he hasn't been an owner for very long, and this will get better. Maybe he wishes he had been nicer to his old general manager with the Bulls, Jerry Krause, who gave him Phil Jackson, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman and enough other surrounding pieces to win six championships, and got mocked by Jordan every step of the way
    Maybe Jordan is just happy to be Michael Jordan. Maybe he feels detached from the whole thing. But I have to believe that in some moments, as the greatest player ever watches one of the worst teams ever, he thinks to himself: "You used to be Michael Jordan. What happened?"

  3. #3
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    I think we need a new term "bandwagon haters" maybe or something along the lines of that to describe this article. Plus didn't that Bismack trade go down after all the teams had picked, how did he expect us to get Knight?

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    The Bobcats used the ninth pick to take Walker. He was a wonderful college player at Connecticut, and he will have a nice NBA career, but you can't build a contending NBA team around Kemba Walker. They should have used the No. 7 pick on Brandon Knight, who went No. 8 to Detroit. Knight may or may not turn out to be a star. But he is taller, younger and is shooting better from three-point range (37.6 percent) than Walker is shooting from everywhere (37.1 percent).
    Soooo many lolz here. We should have taken Brandon Knight, but wait! Brandon Knight may not work out either. Still, we should have taken him.

    -______-

    If we had taken Knight he would have argued we should have taken Kemba, who averages the same amount of points, more assists, and slightly more rebounds.

    What an absolute joke.
    "Sam Vincent? To be honest with you, I don't know what his concept was." - Gerald Wallace

    twitter.com/nickdenning

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    Its just such a base look at the subject. Its horrible writing that belongs in the national enquirer not Sports Illustrated. Its the equivalent of doing a book report on the Bible by looking at the front cover from a telescope on the Goodyear blimp.

  6. #6
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    Just another example of a reporter with minimal information writing a column to people with even less information, and giving people a skewed view from which to formulate an opinion.

    This guy knows nothing about the NBA, its players (he actually compares "young" NBA players to every other young person in the world), its coaches (how the fuck can you insult Paul Silas yet praise Larry Brown), mentions nothing about the hiring of Rich Cho.

    This guy is a moron, and he has no place reporting on the NBA because its clearly a business he knows nothing about.

  7. #7
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    Damn what a piece of garbarge this is....you guys are right this guy didn't even give a damn and wrote this shit in 5 minutes
    Charlotte Hornets - 1987-2002 - RIP
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    Bobcats Fan 4 Life!

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    Guys chill...we're 7 - infinity, it comes with the territory.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by bes628 View Post
    Guys chill...we're 7 - infinity, it comes with the territory.
    Its not about that. We all know we are bad, we all know that theres not a lot of good to talk about. But look at the piece Kevin Pelton from Basketball Prospectus wrote (there is a thread on it already). Same conclusion, the Bobcats suck. But Pelton used one iota of journalism and wrote an even handed honest piece that showed every angle of this shit season/tank job. Pelton didn't suck up to Bobcat fans with praise, but showed an objective take on what actually happened this year. Instead of pointing and laughing like the other guy.

    This toolbag, just threw together some half ass stats with our win record and came to the conclusion that if I put Jordan's name in this article 15 fucking times... someone will read it. My disdain isnt for finding fault with the Bobcats record or method, its for the full fledged attack this guy just mounted against decent journalism.

    Corey Maggette, leading scorer....? Umm in average per minute maybe. But why not mention that he only played in half the games this season, or that he is actually the 6th leading point scorer for the Bobcats this year. Why? because telling the truth wouldnt back up his bogus claim that we have no hope on the roster. its just trash and unfortunately a lot more people read SI than BP.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mustachio View Post
    Its not about that. We all know we are bad, we all know that theres not a lot of good to talk about. But look at the piece Kevin Pelton from Basketball Prospectus wrote (there is a thread on it already). Same conclusion, the Bobcats suck. But Pelton used one iota of journalism and wrote an even handed honest piece that showed every angle of this shit season/tank job. Pelton didn't suck up to Bobcat fans with praise, but showed an objective take on what actually happened this year. Instead of pointing and laughing like the other guy.

    This toolbag, just threw together some half ass stats with our win record and came to the conclusion that if I put Jordan's name in this article 15 fucking times... someone will read it. My disdain isnt for finding fault with the Bobcats record or method, its for the full fledged attack this guy just mounted against decent journalism.

    Corey Maggette, leading scorer....? Umm in average per minute maybe. But why not mention that he only played in half the games this season, or that he is actually the 6th leading point scorer for the Bobcats this year. Why? because telling the truth wouldnt back up his bogus claim that we have no hope on the roster. its just trash and unfortunately a lot more people read SI than BP.

    I agree...the journalism coverage of our team blows. But when you're at the bottom, it tends to happen, nobody gives a shit about us to do actual research, they're just feeding the already existing public opinion of our team.

    Everybody will not be as positive on our tanking situation as some of the folks on this board.


 

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