(found at PacersDigest)
http://www.h-ponline.com/articles/2006/05/18/news/006schultz.txt
DAVE SCHULTZ: It's simple - I hope he loses
There's a Rasheed Wallace Web site. It says he reads all of his mail.
I wonder, though, if someone actually has to read it to him. He may have gone to college (North Carolina), but he doesn't seem to be exceptionally developed in a cranial sense.
For those of you who don't know, Rasheed Wallace is a very talented basketball player who is currently employed by the Detroit Pistons. He has a problem with his mouth. He opens it. Words come out.
When Wallace played with the Portland Trailblazers, he would get technical fouls the way Reggie Miller used to get 3-point field goals - regularly, early, and often. It's tough to contribute to your team's success when you're sitting in the locker room after being ejected, but ‘Sheed never seemed to pick up on that concept.
Then he was traded to the Detroit Pistons, a franchise that has never really erased the odor of the “Bad Boys” of 15 or 16 years ago. Finding a home there, a certified bad boy among the kinda bad boys, he's been a part of the Pistons' recent success.
He's also found his own niche in the National Basketball Association's publicity machine. He's the guy who guarantees victories.
Wallace's success in this process came at the expense of the Indiana Pacers. Living in Indiana and being a fan of all things Hoosier, I didn't like the idea that this bozo would guarantee a victory and that then he went out and did it against the good guys.
Wallace did it earlier this week against the Cleveland Cavaliers - guaranteed a victory, that is - and his team lost. After the game he did not apologize, just shrugging it off. There was no way that his team (the Pistons) would lose the series to that team (the Cavaliers), he said.
Then, last night, improbably, the NBA's best player (at this time), Lebron James, led Cleveland past Rasheed Wallace and Rasheed Wallace's mouth by a score of 86 to 84. Friday night, Mr. Wallace and his mouth could both be sidelined if the Cavaliers hold their home-court advantage.
Justice delayed is justice denied, goes the saying. I wish the Pacers could have stifled this dim bulb; since they didn't, I hope the Cavaliers can do it.
Wallace is an anti-hero - the designated villain in a sporting soap opera. For all the joy we get out of sports, it seems unfortunate that someone who takes the spotlight away from that joy and puts it firmly on himself and what he says should be rewarded with any degree of success.
If there is a spectrum of bad to good things in sports, with 1 being bad and 10 being good, we'll put Rasheed Wallace at about a 0.5. A world of potential, marvelous ability, brain-dead, and selfish.
Mama, don't let your babies grow up to be Rasheed Wallace.
Dave Schultz is associate editor of The Herald-Press. His e-mail address is dschultz@h-ponline.com
There's a Rasheed Wallace Web site. It says he reads all of his mail.
I wonder, though, if someone actually has to read it to him. He may have gone to college (North Carolina), but he doesn't seem to be exceptionally developed in a cranial sense.
For those of you who don't know, Rasheed Wallace is a very talented basketball player who is currently employed by the Detroit Pistons. He has a problem with his mouth. He opens it. Words come out.
When Wallace played with the Portland Trailblazers, he would get technical fouls the way Reggie Miller used to get 3-point field goals - regularly, early, and often. It's tough to contribute to your team's success when you're sitting in the locker room after being ejected, but ‘Sheed never seemed to pick up on that concept.
Then he was traded to the Detroit Pistons, a franchise that has never really erased the odor of the “Bad Boys” of 15 or 16 years ago. Finding a home there, a certified bad boy among the kinda bad boys, he's been a part of the Pistons' recent success.
He's also found his own niche in the National Basketball Association's publicity machine. He's the guy who guarantees victories.
Wallace's success in this process came at the expense of the Indiana Pacers. Living in Indiana and being a fan of all things Hoosier, I didn't like the idea that this bozo would guarantee a victory and that then he went out and did it against the good guys.
Wallace did it earlier this week against the Cleveland Cavaliers - guaranteed a victory, that is - and his team lost. After the game he did not apologize, just shrugging it off. There was no way that his team (the Pistons) would lose the series to that team (the Cavaliers), he said.
Then, last night, improbably, the NBA's best player (at this time), Lebron James, led Cleveland past Rasheed Wallace and Rasheed Wallace's mouth by a score of 86 to 84. Friday night, Mr. Wallace and his mouth could both be sidelined if the Cavaliers hold their home-court advantage.
Justice delayed is justice denied, goes the saying. I wish the Pacers could have stifled this dim bulb; since they didn't, I hope the Cavaliers can do it.
Wallace is an anti-hero - the designated villain in a sporting soap opera. For all the joy we get out of sports, it seems unfortunate that someone who takes the spotlight away from that joy and puts it firmly on himself and what he says should be rewarded with any degree of success.
If there is a spectrum of bad to good things in sports, with 1 being bad and 10 being good, we'll put Rasheed Wallace at about a 0.5. A world of potential, marvelous ability, brain-dead, and selfish.
Mama, don't let your babies grow up to be Rasheed Wallace.
Dave Schultz is associate editor of The Herald-Press. His e-mail address is dschultz@h-ponline.com
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