My question was for the previous poster. Plus if some that did do have an opinion on the subject id like to hear from them directly, but thanks for being their mommy and speaking for them. IMO, experience at the youth and amateur level is quite a different schema than when you play for profit and represent an entire paying fan base.
For people who play professional sports, the war ends as soon as you walk off the court, field etc. We wear two faces. Our everyday face, and the face when we compete. I knew players that were complete opposites on and off the field. True Dr. Jeckell and Mr. Hyde's. There are personal rivalries of course, other players you may dislike, but they have nothing to do with the team. I understand the fan mentality, but to a player, its first, doing something that he loves to do, and getting paid to do it. Secondly, its a professional job and needs to be treated as such. Third, don't get too caught up in love of team or city, because tomorrow you may be on a different team in a different city. Apparently fans want the owner to show loyalty to the city and the fans, while at the same time calling him an idiot, and whatever name comes to mind. If I'm out in center field and a fan out there is riding my butt, calling me names, I'm not going to go to bat thinking I'm going to hit a home run for that guy. Loyalty is a two way street. It's easy to be loyal when everything is going great, but truly loyal fans don't jump ship like rats when the going gets tough.
Criticism if fine, but character assassination crosses the line in my opinion, and it's apparently, just my opinion. If someone wanted to criticize my batting average, or my play in the field, that was fair game. But if they started calling me an idiot, or in Vivek's case, dishonorable, that's an entirely different story. I do my best to talk to and about people on the forum as though I was face to face with them. It's too easy to sit in the privacy of your home and type disrespectful things about people. I'm a believer in living in the moment, but I also believe that you don't forget past history. Vivek is the man that saved the Kings. Yes he had help, but he put his money where his mouth is. I agree that it doesn't automatically excuse future mistakes, but those mistakes shouldn't remove earned respect. Feel free to criticize him for mistakes, but don't disrespect him. There is a difference. I'll listen to anyone that's critical of me, but I quit listening as soon as you disrespect me.
I think the biggest mistake that Vivek made, was listening to the wrong people. People from another organization or organizations that at the moment appeared successful, and who he thought were part of the success. He was wrong, and on the surface, it appears that he knows he was wrong. He doesn't strike me as a mia culpa type guy. Probably didn't have to be in his business world. No reporters hanging around looking for any mistake he might make. As Mark Cuban found out, the NBA is like living in a fish bowl. Everything you do and say is observed and analysed. He's learning that the hard way. I'm not excusing his mistakes, but I understand them.