Cuban and Simmons Twitter Feud

Recently, Marc Cuban has been on a mission to prove the sports media wrong.  He went on First Take to give Skip Bayless a little lesson in basketball.  Bayless, of course, looked foolish and clueless about the sport he’s paid a ton to analyze and shout about.  It was refreshing to watch somebody hold the portion of the sports media that just speaks in hypotheticals and vague terms responsible for their opinions.  Then Cuban took to Twitter.  After Bill Simmons tweeted a criticism directed at the Mavs offseason moves, Cuban fired back.  It went as follows.

Bill Simmons (@sportsguy33):  Put it this way:  I wasn’t crazy about Elton Brand and Chris Kaman playing together in 2006 when they were still good.

Mark Cuban (@mcuban):  @sportsguy33.  They next smart personnel comment you mae will be your first.

Then, a third party tweeted at both of them, prompting another response from Cuban.

@Cmackchase:  @mcuban @sportsguy33 Well to be fair, Simmons also didn’t let an entire championship team minus the superstar walk away for nothing.

Mark Cuban (@mcuban):  @Cmackchase @sportsguy33 possibly because he has never had any involvement with a championship team.

After Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert randomly retweeted Cuban’s championship jab, Simmons responded.

Bill Simmons (@sportsguy33):  @mcuban I loved your Tyson Chandler trade, and I thought it was dumb when you let him leave.  There’s two.

Mark Cuban (@mcuban):  @sportsguy33.  Two what?  Is “thought it was dumb” your definitive logic for making personnel decisions?

Now, I’ve long been a fan of Cuban, if not for the simple fact that he’s a billionaire that went to Indiana.  When he schooled Bayless, I laughed at Skip getting called out for his useless insight that’s only purpose was to provoke audiences, but Cuban’s getting out of hand.

Those involved in sports have no right to criticize the sports media for not being a part of an actual team.  That’s not where their talents were best used, and for Cuban to arrogantly look down at Simmons and question his basketball knowledge is preposterous.  He’s clearly on an angry rampage against the media and trying to expose their lack of substantial knowledge about the sports they cover…he’s wrong!

Simmons wrote an entire book on basketball and has proven time and time again he’s extremely well versed in the intricacies of the sport.  Cuban needs to get off his high horse and stop blaming the media when he can’t control his own team.  The Mavericks are a mess, and Simmons has the right to criticize them, whether or not the owner likes it.

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Jason Kidd, Elvis Dumervil and Athletes Getting Arrested

When I woke up Sunday, there really wasn’t much news in the sports world.  There was a lot of Jeremy Lin speculation and a couple of passing stories.  The truly ugly part of Sunday’s news lineup is that I considered a boring day in sports and two all-stars were arrested.  Elmis Dumervil, pro-bowl Defensive End for the Broncos, was arrested on an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon charge and Jason Kidd, a 10-time all-star and NBA champion, was arrested for DWI.

All too often in sports, these sort of events go unnoticed.  It seems as if crime and sports go hand in hand.  On any given day you can find an arrest of another player or coach who foolishly thought they were above the law.  It’s a sense of entitlement that makes fans that would give up drinking for a lifetime to play professional sports angry and disgusted.  Jason Kidd signed a three-year, $9.5 million deal with the Knicks Thursday.  Part of his responsibility was to mentor Jeremy Lin, by Sunday he was arrested.  The worst part is he’ll pay a fine, maybe a stern scolding from management and move on like it never happened.  Just another drunk athlete behind the wheel, a millionaire basketball player putting everybody on the road at risk.

It’s a frustrating battle for fans looking to find relatability and normalcy in athletes.  We want to connect and we often do, but it’s the actions of those like Kidd and Dumervil that alienate us.  Dumervil really had to get into an argument with another car on the road?  He really wants to live a thug life so bad that he just had a gun on him?  Really?  His $61.5 million contract through 2015 wasn’t enough?  Setting a payday record for his pass-rushing position just wasn’t enough of a motivation to lead a respectable life?

Jason Kidd couldn’t have gotten a driver?  He got in the accident a mile and a half from his house.  He couldn’t have planned before the night to get as plastered as he wanted to, but have a cab come?  I’m a broke 21-year-old and I figure out ways to get sober rides home.  So when athletes tell us they made a mistake, and that we all make mistakes, it’s just not true.  Dumervil and Kidd won’t pay like your average citizen would, and until we as an audience react differently to incidents like this, it’ll continue happening.

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Lou Williams and Possible Fits

There are so many free agents this summer that it’s tough to keep track of.  With the focus on big names, fans can occasionally forget about the minor signings that make a team work.  In the case of the Celtics, their main pursuit was Ray Allen.  He’s the superstar that they focused on signing but missed out on.  In the meantime, they signed Brandon Bass, Jason Terry and are close to a deal with Jeff Green.  These two huge moves give the Celtics size and comfort, especially because Bass’ return gives them their starting five back.

While moves like the Nets re-signing Deron Williams were the main focus of the off season, it’s one like signing Lou Williams that can turn a team into a championship contender.  Lou walked away from the Sixers after averaging 14.9 points off the bench last year, he was the team’s leading scorer.  He can shoot and drive, and his versatility as a bench player gives you the option of putting a scorer in the game at any time.  He’s the perfect addition for a contending team that needs some youth in their backcourt.

A possible fit for Lou Williams is with the Mavericks, who let both Jason Terry and Jason Kidd go this off-season.  Another destination could be the Bulls, who are in need of a back court star with an injured Derrick Rose.

Williams seemed to fit in Philadelphia, where they were discovering success with a group of youngster’s who didn’t know any better than to play their hearts out.  He gave them instant offense after droughts where they struggled to put the ball in the hoop, but those days are gone now, and whoever picks up Lou Williams is making a very smart decision.

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NBA Marketing: LeBron, KD and Dirk

The NBA, like any major corporation, has mastered it’s marketing.  And the audience, like any consumer, is falling for the image a corporation has put out to fool them.  The players are perfectly positioned.  It all centers on LeBron James‘ move to Miami.  The NBA took those images of distraught Cleveland fans burning jerseys and essentially made it their mission statement.  The foundation of the league’s image is that LeBron is the villain.  He represents what people see as what’s wrong with modern sports, and even modern society.  His talent is limitless, but his arrogant announcement and ringless fingers represent a sense of unearned entitlement.  Of course, this image is unfair and over exaggerated.  LeBron is certainly a polarizing figure and a frustratingly annoying player to watch, but he’s by far the best player in the league, and any 25 year old who says they haven’t made a cocky mistake is lying to you.  However the league feeds into this conceived image of LeBron, giving him superstar calls that encourage flopping, but for every villain there are a handful heroes.

Once LeBron’s announcement took place, the affection for Kevin Durant multiplied exponentially.  He seemed to be the anti-LeBron, and the NBA embraced that image with open arms.  Smooth and skinny, Durant made impossible shots and graceful dunks with no celebration.  I guess this qualified him to be the resident good guy around the NBA.  The marketing train took advantage of the perception of Durant, placing him in commercials on the rafters of the Ford Center preaching about championships and dedication.  Or at the scorer’s table scolding cell-phone users for playing doodle jump.  Seriously?  Man, that’s messed up.  Or maybe he’s just looking for a pickup game, like he was during the lockout. The NBA has branded Durant as what’s right in sports, he’s dedicated, loyal and humble.  There’s an authenticity to Durant’s game and demeanor that LeBron just doesn’t have.  So the NBA found a gift in Kevin Durant, a player that loves the game enough to play when the NBA isn’t even around is the perfect promoting tool.  He’s the dramatic foil to LeBron.

The problem with Durant, at least last year, is that he still hadn’t won anything.  So the NBA was going to have to embrace a Miami championship and amplify the LeBron villain angle rather than the heroes fighting against him.  Then came Dirk Nowitzki.  Dirk, who’s game resembles Larry Bird-esc traditionalism, displayed one of the most clutch performances I’ve seen in sports.  Tall, goofy and cognizant in the waning minutes of the game, Dirk discovered the adoration of a nation waiting to spit in the Heat’s face.  Don’t think appearance isn’t relevant, audiences related to his oaffy exterior.  In contrast, audiences rejected the strutting Heat, tatted up and high-flying, representing a city known for flashiness. He found ways to score when LeBron simply couldn’t, which lead to a full year of smothering coverage about LeBron’s lack of clutch gene.  An undermanned team beat a heavy Miami favorite that audiences hated, even if they didn’t know the full story, and none of us know the full story.

What we do know is that LeBron made two mistakes.  One was choosing Miami, which is something that is a personal decision and up to James.  However the bigger mistake was the execution of “The Decision.”  Over the top, obnoxious and self-promoting, LeBron’s announcement drew criticism from every angle of the media, including the enablers at ESPN.  Sure, it was stupid, and it’s easy to root against LeBron, but he was in his mid 20’s and made a self-centered move that will follow him for the rest of his life.  He didn’t hurt anybody or cheat.  Modern athletes have done far worse and received far less criticism, but the machine is moving, and there’s no stopping it now.  The NBA is going to milk LeBron’s image along with his foils for as long and as much money as they can.

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Lamar Odom Continues to Struggle

For Lamar Odom, things can’t get much worse.  Maybe that’s the positive message he needs to embrace so he can regain his confidence.  Last night’s one point performance against his former team marked another troublesome day for Odom, whose fallen from grace so dramatically that the fans in Dallas boo him with authority.  It’s become obvious that he’s in his own head.  Whatever mental issues Odom’s experiencing, they’re making him think, and basketball players can’t afford to think.  It’s that hesitation that’s cut Odom’s career averages in scoring and rebounding in half this season, he’s become a liability.  When the ball is in his hands, I can’t watch.  He looks like the friend that decided to play in the pick-up game, and is just trying to not mess up, and for Odom even that isn’t working.

The question is, for a Dallas team that’s in the playoff picture but struggling, how long do you let Odom find his identity on the team?  Clearly there are personal issues he must work out, and that sort of self-discovery is larger than basketball, but can the Mavericks afford to stick with an ailing player?  Owner Mark Cuban has had said he fully supports Odom.  The affirmation was necessary after players voiced displeasure at a 10-day personal leave Odom took when his father, who has battled heroin addiction throughout his life, fell ill.  It was a long break, but nobody wants to be the bad guy in this situation.  Nobody wants to make Lamar’s situation anymore awful than it already is.  However, for the Mavericks, who are currently 6th in the Western Conference standings, the painfully awkward moment may come where Odom will be featured even less than his 21 minutes per game average this season.  He may never find his niche in Dallas.  For now, the Mavs will stick with Odom and hope he can return to his dangerous self.  The reward is a 14-point and 9 rebound big man who can make the outside shot.  The risk is teammate tension, extraordinarily unproductive minutes, and bringing down the locker room.  Who knows if Lamar Odom will show up in the postseason, but it’s certainly a compelling story that is beginning to transcend sports.

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