(cont)
in getting players to see the bigger picture-not just the financial implications of walking away from the rest of the season, but losing the strength of the platform they have in the bubble to continue to push for the changes they want.”https://t.co/0W3jZte0hC
— The Lakers Review (@TheLakersReview) August 27, 2020
Posts
Games could resume as soon as Friday
The resumption of playoff games could come as soon as Friday, but there is expected to be a return to this season by the weekend, sources tell ESPN. https://t.co/A2PazNKDhy
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) August 27, 2020
There is a meeting of NBA owners and players set for later today, sources tell @MarcJSpears and me. The discussion is expected to include plans of action moving forward on social justice issues.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) August 27, 2020
The NBA’s players have decided to resume the playoffs
The NBA's players have decided to resume the playoffs, source tells ESPN.
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) August 27, 2020
https://twitter.com/ShamsCharania/status/129901432048805478
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Sources: Players today discussed the sacrifices all of them have made to reach this point in the postseason, and sense of normalcy returning with families entering Disney Campus. Players who voted not to play on Wednesday night understood.
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 27, 2020
Yahoo Sources: There was a change in position from last night with LeBron James, among others, relaying it was in their best interest to finish out the season.
— Chris Haynes (@ChrisBHaynes) August 27, 2020
The NBA has paused the playoffs. Now what?
This is a great look at where the NBA stands now from @hmfaigen. https://t.co/A2CEjPA8BH
— Sabreena Merchant (@sabreenajm) August 27, 2020
The NBA playoffs have been postponed for at least one day, and there is at least a chance of more delays to come.
So if it ends today, or over the next few days, how will the NBA bubble be remembered? For one, history books will reflect that the league was once again a trendsetter on doing the right thing. But while it was the league office that made the (correct) call to halt the season after one positive coronavirus case, this time it was the players refusing to give people a distraction from the fight against systemic racism that is clearly a long way from over.
And even if it the NBA doesn’t crown a champion, the achievements the bubble helps spearhead may be much further reaching. It has helped set off similar protests in other pro sports that may snowball into real change if they wake people up, and on the coronavirus front, the league’s and players union’s efforts in Orlando helped pioneer a saliva-based coronavirus test that could make it far more affordable and feasible to turn the tide of this pandemic.
But make no mistake: there would be consequences to the season being halted, both near and far reaching. NBA ownership may tear up the collective bargaining agreement, and contracts around the league will likely be impacted. But we can discuss these and the many other impacts of all this at a later date, if and when they happen.
For now, the news that is in jeopardy will undoubtedly make everyone who loves this sport sad. But if that’s the thing we have to be most upset about today, then we should probably count ourselves lucky, think about the privilege that allows for that to be our biggest problem, and do what we can — with our votes, with our emails, with our phone calls and more — to fight the systemic racism that is hurting so many more people than just the players we love to watch, and has left them ultimately on the verge of stepping away.
5 Things: Black Lives Matter
I was not 100% on board the reboot. I got more excited as it got closer, as the protests around the nation and across the planet grew more peaceful, especially after the Federal Militia was removed from Portland. I support, and continue to support any and all athletes of any race, creed or color who feel their duty lies elsewhere than in their chosen profession. But since it would appear that police in any state across this country can’t figure out how to detain one person without opening fire, often discharging multiple rounds in the doing, the question of “when will enough truly be enough” seems further away than ever.
- I stand with the boycott today and any future boycotts the athletes, coaches and members of the NBA brotherhood and WNBA sisterhood and all the various sporting entities that seem to finally be coming to their senses on this issue choose to take, It’s their talent, it’s their skill, it’s their choice to become a professional athlete in this modern world. It’s likely that players like George Hill, Avery Bradley and the many players who questioned whether going into the Bubble would take away the focus on the largely peaceful protests (more on that topic later) were right. In short, we don’t get to demand or choose what these men and women do. They are adults, they get to make this decision, not anyone else.
- I think shutting down the Bubble is a smart move but one that is unlikely to happen. There’s a litany of reasons why they should: to simply be with their families to help explain to their kids what is going on and why it’s important and needed. To be in their communities where they live to show their support, to show their solidarity in the face of ever-escalating, often unpunished police brutality. Let’s be honest, this as important a moment in America as anything else in recent history. To not try, to shrink from this moment, would be an injustice in and of itself. In my opinion, pro sport can survive this. Shut it down. Great execution, innovative idea but this is more important.
- There’s a huge issue in America that has been lurking beneath the surface, growing in scope and urgency while never really being addressed and that is the marginalization of the poor, needy and particularly people of color. I won’t get into the litany of stats showing this to be true. Oddly enough I just started watching United Shades of America on CNN and that show has got it right. The white supremacy movement is often portrayed as rural yokels yukking it up about people they don’t like and why. It’s far more insidious and pervasive than that: it’s built into our education systems, our banking systems, how our political lines are drawn through gerrymandering, it manifests in entertainment when white people are chosen to portray characters of non-Caucasian ethnic backgrounds and that’s just the tip. Besides being a musical entertainer, generally through the ostracized genre of hip hop, or an athlete there aren’t a lot of ways for children of color to pull themselves out of poverty. That’s not by accident, that is by design.
- If all of the above rankles you or you don’t understand why this is happening, here’s one piece of advice: try harder. If Drew Brees can go from “I support BLM but I don’t support kneeling for the anthem” to “I was wrong, my friends, family,teammates and colleagues explained it to me and now I get that it’s not about the flag” than so can you. Drew ain’t a genius but he obviously is possessed of compassion and understanding. It’s not about dissing the flag, or God or whatever you think it’s about. Because chances are that if you do think it’s about one or more of those things you’re white. So here’s my shot at reaching you: fellow white folk, the best thing you can do right now is listen, support your friends of color or different nationality, because this has stopped being a discussion of it’s bad but rather one about how bad we will allow it to become. You don’t have to make a sign, you don’t have to march and protest (although it would be cooler if you did). Start with the simplest first step: stop your opinionating and blathering and listen to the members of the community that you are disconnected from. Start there. Make a new friend, fuck it, make two. Allow them the chance to explain it you. Don’t use the acts of violence which are not exclusively being perpetrated by the protestors as a truly shitty excuse to willfully not understand.
- But will the NBA, WNBA, MLB, and other sporting leagues not playing make everything better? In a word: nope. But it will help and here’s how. First and foremost it will bring a focus and unity to the call for justice. Every voice counts and while it was both admirable and unprecedented as to how the NBA showed it’s support for the Black Lives Matter movement they were, at best, well-intentioned gestures of solidarity. At worst it could be construed as corporate lip service to a huge issue that effects the majority of it’s employees. No single person, group of people or sporting league is going to fix this. But the more voices behind the movement the louder it can be. So, to all that, I hope all professional sports go dark, that the owners stand with their players and the fans can come to a level of basic understanding as to why it’s important.
I get it. For a lot of people this must be so tiring; having to watch people demand something you’ve enjoyed since birth, not really having to ever had to work for your privilege. You were born with it, it won’t ever go away and, boy isn’t too bad that everyone can’t just get along like you seem to be able to do… My advice? Stop talking, don’t try to find a quick fix because there isn’t one: listen, make a new friend outside your personal bubble, heck, give a BLM march a spin and tell your fellow marchers you don’t get it. Let their passion convince you. Because we’re not going anywhere at all if we don’t go together.
Like phred used to say: it’s all about the love.