Author: whodeanny

What’s Right About the NBA?

Good things and good works from folks like Starbury.

Marbury will make appearances at Steve & Barrys in Albany, Rochester and Buffalo before appearing Aug. 21 in Manhattan with two 18-wheelers for a giveaway of sneakers, haircuts and food.

Thanks bro.

TP

MN bridge tragedy

Here’s a poem about the MN bridge tragedy.

Ish.

This feels much worse than just thinking about a dozen or fewer hopefully people dying. Cancer, AIDS, homicide probably do that every hour and I think all those deaths are unfair too. Is it familiarity? Frailty? The idea that I drive over similar bridges and only notice the water, never the bridge?

I will continue to think about Minnesota, and am more likely to write MN friends, even the ones I just know from there not only the ones who are there. Too much impact but still I’m happy I care as much as I do. Even if I don’t understand the reasons behind it.

TP

Necessary NBA changes

Suggestions for NBA Rule Changes in 2007-08

Since the NBA is dealing with an incredibly uncomfortable refereeing controversy thanks to Tim Donaghy it seems clear that NBA officiating will be even more scrutinized in the upcoming seasons. As a response, I’ve come up with a few suggestions that may help lead to 1) better officiating and 2) a better product.

The most important suggestion I have is the one most likely to cause controversy. We need a fourth ref. Yep, let’s add to the incompetence. I know that there are not enough good refs as it is but part of the reason for this is simply that there are too many things for refs to pay attention to each trip down. Nobody suggests that referees don’t work very hard because they do. Bottom line is that this is a really difficult job to do. The speed, size and smarts of NBA players mean it’s often difficult to determine fouls, possession, timing and violations even with replays. It’s silly to assume that the guys in stripes will always get it right. However, having a 4th ref will mean that each ref will have less responsibility, more help and hopefully, a specific area of the court to monitor.

Please understand that I’m well aware of the trouble the league has had finding good refs. Adding 15 more is not ideal but the hope from this quarter is that having less to do and less to manage will make even the most nominal of refs better and decent ones solid. I’m confident that the few top notch refs would be impacted the least.

All four of the refs would have a side of the floor (2 on the sidelines, 1 on the baseline and a trail official) as their position for any possession. The refs would rotate areas throughout the course of the game to minimize the possibility for conflict. This change can also help reduce the incidence of the always uncomfortable sight of a ref forty feet away making a call while a ref ten feet away swallows the whistle. With four refs, there would be no reason for anyone to make those absurd stretch calls.

To help realize this change, the league needs to make a couple small physical adjustments to the court. (Actually, I’ve been stunned that this hasn’t happened already.) The court needs to be widened at least two feet. Four feet would be even better. Too many games are impacted because a size 17 shoe hits a sideline (or the three point line) inadvertently. Driving lanes would also improve and the game as a whole might open up a bit.

There also needs to be an enforced restricted zone on each baseline. There is no reason to have photographers and cheerleaders as close to the court as they currently are. Referees need to be able to observe the bumping and grinding safely and up close. Safety for player would be an added benefit. The first time LeBron or Agent Zero incurs a knee injury from falling into a photographer everyone will say I told you so. I’m telling you so now.

Another way to help officials monitor games is to remove the use of drawing charges as a defensive tactic. The primary defender block/charge call works pretty well and doesn’t need much adjustment. The necessary change regards secondary defenders who insert themselves into the play for the purpose of drawing a charging foul. The new rule should presume a block call unless the offensive player initiates contact.

Referees would no longer need to make the choice between watching the action ten feet in the air or the interaction of a giant sneaker with a painted circle. What a ridiculous thing to ask of officials. Get rid of the circle, get rid of undercutting, and get rid of cheap defense. This removes a major source of conflict between officials and coaches (not to mention fans!).

Speaking of conflict, last season the league tried to minimize player conflict with referees and it worked to an impressive degree. Now, even the appearance of ref impropriety in games will be a profound negative. Smart players question calls early on to intimidate refs into giving them calls. That will increase tremendously since no ref wants to get the ‘Donaghy’ chant. This is an area where the league will need to give its officials help. To inhibit player dispute in games, I propose a new technical foul system.

There should now be two kinds of technical fouls. Violation Technicals (defensive 3 seconds, delay of game, rim hanging, extra timeout being called, etc…) would continue to be single free throw technicals. There would be a new classification for Conduct Technicals that would be punished harshly. CTs would be penalized with two free throws and returned possession. CTs need to include belligerent physicality, egregious player arguments, bench techs and perhaps the second head coach tech in a game.

I hate to even suggest it, but the NBA should also look into a challenge system of some sort. It works reasonably well in the NFL and in the NBA it would quickly, definitively clarify important issues. Instant replay is already used to a small degree but there are times when coaches would love to argue a 2/3 point shot, an out of bounds call or a shot clock violation. Allowing two challenges per half, with a NFL style punishment of timeout loss for incorrect challenges, would barely interfere with gameplay as nearly all these situations can be reviewed with just a couple views of a replay.

Finally, the jump ball is criminally underused. There are far too many times that refs honestly don’t know who touched a ball last. Guessing should cease to be the solution. If the league won’t encourage replay use in these situations, then a center court jump ball is the next best option.

I’ll be interested in any comments or reflections on these possibilities.

TP

Minnesota Bridge Collapse

just a few words in memory:


Minnesota Bridge Collapse
Franklin Oliver

I probably don’t know anyone who’s drowned in the Mississippi River tonight. I wrote a poem once about an escape across the Ohio but there was a reason for that crossing. It mattered. Today was routine. The drive from work, to the restaurant, on the way to church, the Twins game or over to the U for an evening class.

In the late afternoon, the river was a nice view since the sun shines a little differently on it than the rest of the water in town. And then it began to pour. Concrete, steel, cars, people, trucks, lives and worlds falling in to and on top of each other. Pouring, dropping, dying into the river.

I care too much about them. I’ll ask too many questions and find too few answers. I already know that I’ll never quite understand. Why these people? Who did they harm?

Was one of the victims Jaime’s nurse when she got sick last summer? Will Bob’s summer camp counselor be found in the morning clinging to a rock? Did Nolita’s friend Melissa take 494 today instead of 35W?

7, 19, 62, 88 dead, whatever the number, all their lives are gone. And all their stories are still waiting to be told. From the river to the sea. From them to us. Let the ripples lead to waves.

© Gayle Force Press 2007

$3 4 Excess

$3 is a good price for excess.

Of course excess is relative. If the difference is nothing to a drink, that’s one thing.

Moving from a drink to a buzz

From a buzz to being drunk

From being drunk to rocked

From being rocked to being stupid

From being stupid to being dangerous

From being dangerous to deserving to die

Franklin Oliver

© Gayle Force Press 2007

David Stern

In response to a question from a NY Post reporter who failed to identify herself before asking her question, David Stern used the word ‘replete’. It seemed like a perfectly timed, deliberate verbal bitch slap. His expression made it clear that he did not expect her to know the word. Just vicious. Hey, harsh quoter!

Be well.

And oh yeah, we’re baaaack!

TP

Wedding Statement

I’ve been asked to reprint an element of our marriage program by numerous people. I think is the easiest way to make it available. Our country is still making progress in this direction. I hope you all help.


Thank you for being with us today. We are blessed with wonderful
family
and friends, and we are pleased that you are joining us as we celebrate
our wedding.

We appreciate and respect the values and benefits of marriage, thus it
saddens us that not everyone is allowed this opportunity. Fifty years
ago, our marriage would have been illegal in most states. Now, it seems
clear that making different laws based on race is discriminatory and
wrong. We think that making different laws based on sexual orientation
is also discriminatory and wrong.

Please join us in supporting laws, initiatives and politicians who
advocate marriage rights for everyone. Let love be the highest law.

Franklin Oliver and Rachel Sipes

Tag Team Candidates?

I wonder if it really has significance but there are numerous pundits already speculating on the possibilities of Presidential/Vice Presidential pairings. Clinton/Richardson, Hagel/Bloomberg or Bloomberg/Hagel, Gore/Obama are all being floated as likely teams. Is this a painfully premature shift or the start of a new mechanism for creating momentum, support and anticipation?

Just one of the speculative ideas:

Clinton-Richardson ticket in the making?

TP