Nothing good happens at 4am.http://www.click2houston.com/sports/18948362/detail.html
Rockets player Cal Landry was shot late last night after getting back from NO. Apparently, he was just getting some food. Good thing he's ok.
No, it wasn't blatant stupidity (he wasn't involved in a bar fight at a strip club, throwing thousands of dollars into the air, for instance). But it was ill-advised, and well, stupid, for him to be out at 4:30 in the morning, probably driving his flashy car around. I'm assuming.I opened this fully expecting another story about blatant stupidity on the part of an athlete. I was actually glad it wasn't the case in this instance. My thoughts and prayers are with Landry and his family.
No, it wasn't blatant stupidity (he wasn't involved in a bar fight at a strip club, throwing thousands of dollars into the air, for instance). But it was ill-advised, and well, stupid, for him to be out at 4:30 in the morning, probably driving his flashy car around. I'm assuming.
There are conflicting reports, though. Some say it was 1:30am, some say 4:30am. I'm not saying Landry is at fault, because both reports say it was a random act of violence. I just hope these guys get the point that bad things are exponentially more likely to happen to/around them, the later at night it is. They are already targets (there have been a lot of celebrities/athletes attacked in the past few months), and should be even more careful than usual because of that.
No, it wasn't blatant stupidity (he wasn't involved in a bar fight at a strip club, throwing thousands of dollars into the air, for instance). But it was ill-advised, and well, stupid, for him to be out at 4:30 in the morning, probably driving his flashy car around. I'm assuming.
There are conflicting reports, though. Some say it was 1:30am, some say 4:30am. I'm not saying Landry is at fault, because both reports say it was a random act of violence. I just hope these guys get the point that bad things are exponentially more likely to happen to/around them, the later at night it is. They are already targets (there have been a lot of celebrities/athletes attacked in the past few months), and should be even more careful than usual because of that.
I thought so at first, too, but this happened in Houston, right? Houston isn't three hours different from anywhere in the US. That could be the issue, but who knows...the time difference sounds like a time-zone thing (3 hours).
Wow. Talk about leaping off assumption cliff and landing in conclusion pond without any kind of basis in fact.
The article didn't say he was out partying; in fact, unless I missed something, it said he was getting something to eat after the team got back from New Orleans.
So where's the irresponsible action there?
Sorry, Supes, but I think you're out of line.
Sources indicate Landry was en route to get something to eat after the team arrived from New Orleans, where they had beaten the Hornets.
It makes them hungry and not in the mood to take the time to actually cook.
Why would he leave the house in the middle of the night by himself? Has it really come to that? Should all professional athletes be so afraid of what's waiting for them out in the dark that they just cower in their homes?
More **** happens at 4 in the morning.Landry was a victim but I don't think he brought it on himself. **** happens.
I thought so at first, too, but this happened in Houston, right? Houston isn't three hours different from anywhere in the US. That could be the issue, but who knows...
I'm not saying he did anything wrong, or was at fault. I'm not saying he escalated the situation.Okay, here's the deal:
The team didn't leave New Orleans for probably two hours after the game. Once they got back to Houston, they most likely were taken by bus back to their arena where their cars would have been waiting. Thus, it would easily have been understandable why he was out at that time of the night/morning. AND I think it's pretty clear he was most likely stopping on the way home - not leaving from his home as you assumed.
So he decided to stop at a Taco Bell or something on the way home and he was the victim of a random act of violence on the way there. I just do not see where he did anything wrong. Now if further details emerge that indicate he was driving recklessly, flipped someone off, or did something else to precipitate some kind of retaliatory road rage, that would be different but it certainly doesn't sound that way...
The time difference is when it happened vs. when the authorities were notified.
http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/9345928/Rockets-F-shot-in-leg-after-he-was-rear-ended
According to that report above, Carl's car got hit twice, he gets out the car to inspect the damage (which I think anyone would have done), gets shot at twice with one hitting him in the leg.
So, according to your link, it happened at 2:30am.
I'm not saying he did anything wrong, or was at fault. I'm not saying he escalated the situation.
I'm saying that he put himself in danger by being out so late, and that I hope he comes to understand -- him and others like him -- that he is a target and should do whatever he can to protect himself.
Perhaps so, but it was still the middle of the night.Ordinarily I would agree, but in this case I don't think he was the target because he was an athlete. More or less the thugs that were in the other were looking for trouble regardless whether it was Carl Landry or any other person driving an over-priced car.
I'm not saying he did anything wrong, or was at fault. I'm not saying he escalated the situation.
I'm saying that he put himself in danger by being out so late, and that I hope he comes to understand -- him and others like him -- that he is a target and should do whatever he can to protect himself. It's a bit myopic to assume that going out at 4 in the morning, for anything, isn't a dangerous proposition.
Perhaps so, but it was still the middle of the night.
Perhaps so, but it was still the middle of the night.
He didn't "go out at 4 in the morning." He was actually heading HOME from the arena after picking up his car after returning to Houston from New Orleans. He decided to pick up something to eat on his way home. If that's putting himself in danger by being out so late, then I guess all players are just going to have to cower in the practice facility until broad daylight?
I just don't see how you're drawing the conclusion that he put himself in danger and should do whatever he can to protect himself. What, and I'm really trying to understand your point of view, should he and other players do differently? If anything, the only thing he actually did wrong was to get out of his car to inspect the damage of a minor traffic collision and I cannot imagine being so afraid of your surroundings that you - or me or anyone else for that matter - wouldn't have done the exact same thing.
This could just have easily have been Joe Citizen of Houston. It only became news because it was Carl Landry, NOT because he was doing something to create some kind of dangerous scenario that might have logically led to this kind of random violence.