"After the punches and counterpunches, after the apologizing and moralizing, it was time for the repercussions. And on a sad, sad night for professional sports, on a sobering night in suburban Detroit, an astonishing hammer was delivered.
It had to be done. After the ugliest brawl came the strongest message, the appropriate message. You hope everyone -- players, fans, the whole sports world -- heard it.
With stunning clarity, NBA Commissioner David Stern suspended Indiana star Ron Artest for the rest of the season, the harshest penalty in league history for an on-court incident. Artest had precipitated the brawl at Friday night's Pistons-Pacers game, a disgusting altercation with ripples just starting to grow.
Three other Pacers -- Stephen Jackson (30 games), Jermaine O'Neal (25 games) and Anthony Johnson (five games) -- also were suspended, essentially gutting that team. Pistons center Ben Wallace, who shoved Artest after a hard foul, was suspended for six games. Three other Pistons -- Elden Campbell, Derrick Coleman and Chauncey Billups -- were suspended one game, as was Indiana's Reggie Miller. "
There has already been much said about this, but I still want to add my voice to the chorus. This cannot be allowed. It cannot be viewed as an an anomaly. I want to see more than a simple suspension.
"When you're in jail, a good friend will be trying to bail you out. A best friend will be in the cell next to you saying, 'Damn, that was fun'." — Groucho Marx
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Still Driving Traffic
Still one of the most popular posts on the blog.
-
If you want to see how thoughts, ideas and impressions can be manipulated by the media take a few minutes to watch Pallywood .
-
***Third Update- I encourage you to also check out : How Many Blogs Do You Read? A question for those who choose to answer. How did you com...
-
She is pregnant with her 18th child . Yes ladies and gentlemen, the Duggars are back. We first encountered The Duggar Family in the followin...
2 comments:
Somehow I'm not surprised we'd disagree on this. I think the players should be applauded for finally doing something to try to shut up fans that no limits to their behavior. Before Artest went into the stands, he was doing exactly what he was supposed to be doing. The on-court issues had settled down and the players were calming down.
It's the fans in Detroit who aggravated the situation.
Where does it say that fans are allowed to throw things and call players names and throw insults at them that nobody should have to tolerate?
Jackie Robinson dealt with much worse and for much longer and never did anything like this. The fans behavior was horrible, but it doesn't excuse the players.
Post a Comment