fredericks: (Default)
fredericks ([personal profile] fredericks) wrote2007-02-15 06:25 pm

(no subject)

Former NBA player John Amaechi publicly outted himself a couple of days back, and the media picked up the story like it was government cheese. To my recollection Amaechi was more well-known for his international player status than for anything he did on the court and I was sort of "meh, okay" on the news, but I was curious as to what players would think. Then I caught Tim Hardaway's little diatribe on SportsCenter yesterday morning (or was it this morning?) My response to that? Thank God. Not "thank God, let's be an asswipe" but thank God he's being straightforward. Don't sugarcoat the hate or hide it; it makes it much easier to know who to avoid and who to write off as a dickwad. I'm with Amaechi's response all the way.

[identity profile] fredericks.livejournal.com 2007-02-20 08:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I hear you. I mean, whether or not Hardaway was allowed to participate in the All-Star rigamarole, he'd said his piece. His opinions and mindset were known. Not having him participate certainly wouldn't go back in time and erase what he said...but Hardaway the private citizen is different than Hardaway the representative of the NBA. Stern and Co. said that Hardaway was given das boot from the All Star gig because his publically stated beliefs didn't mesh with the policy of the NBA. Censorship? again, there's no magic erasure going back and muffling Hardaway's words. He wasn't being silenced - Hardaway can go back on any radio talk show and say what he wishes. Anyone who's listened or read Hardaway's apology - a simply "I'm sorry for saying what I did" - knows the man is not apologizing for his beliefs, and no one at the NBA asked that of him.