Monday, August 11, 2008

Scoop Jackson gets into the Olympic spirit by writing a horrendous Olympic themed article

There's this theory I learned about in college called "The Banality of Evil," that essentially says that that most people in the world who do evil things (ethnic cleansing, drug cartels, Matthew McConaughey/Kate Hudson movies) are completely oblivious to the lack of morality in their actions.

Therefore, I present to you Scoop Jackson as proof of my thesis: "The Banality of Stupidity."

USA basketball is missing something ... or someone

They looked good, didn't they? Flashes of '92, right? Like we 'bout to get that ol' thing back.


I would never phrase it that way, but yes.

But something still doesn't feel right, right? There's still something wrong, isn't there? It's like something is missing, but you just … can't … put … your … finger on it.

Perhaps it's the fact that the '92 team had 10 of the top 50 NBA players of all time, along with the fact that basketball wasn't the international sport it is today. A wild guess; I know.

Let me help. There was a point in the third quarter of USA's final pre-Beijing tune-up against Australia (which was playing without Andrew Bogut, mind you) when Chris Bosh took over. The U.S. lead had fallen to single digits. But, off a pass from Dwyane Wade, Bosh came down the lane doing his best David Robinson impersonation and threw one down.

David Robinson: previously the only American to take a pass and dunk it in Olympic competition.

But after that, the Australians scored with ease. And often. They never flinched; they acted as if Bosh's dunk was nothing more than two points.

When in reality the dunk had been worth 7 points because Bosh had taken off from an NBA JAM Hot Spot.

Another national team, scared by us in a basketball game? Not anymore. Not even facing the best team the U.S. has been able to assemble in eight years.

Not like in '92 when it was routine for the US's opponents to sneak out of bathroom windows during halftime.

But Chris Bosh is not the issue here. He just exposed the void that might just hinder the Redeem Team's quest for gold. What's missing on this team is an intangible that, on his best day, Bosh (or Dwight Howard, or Carlos Boozer, or anyone else on the team) can't provide -- the intangible that would make this feeling that's gnawing at the bottom of our stomachs like leftover ceviche go away.

Please note that he says that the team is missing an intangible.

On the eve of the opening ceremony, it's too late to do anything about it. This team has other concerns too -- like occasional apathetic defense, intensity lapses and not having anyone besides Michael Redd to drop needles from 30 feet or anyone besides Tayshaun Prince to lock down a player like Spain's Juan Carlos Navarro if he gets warm. But what's missing is …

Amare Stoudemire.

So apparently Amare Stoudemire is now a phantasm because he can be listed as an intangible. What other wisdom can you impart upon us, oh brilliant basketball sage?

Even though Chris Anstey of Australia believes the fear factor is still there ("I think a lot of teams get intimidated by that [U.S.] team"), the truth is, if the intimidation factor was there, none of us would have that feeling in our stomach.

Even though there's evidence to prove the intimidation factor is still there, it actually isn't because I get nervous (and therefore, assume everyone else does) while watching the games.

Nothing against anyone on this squad, but Stoudemire -- who elected not to participate, concerned about the health of his surgically-repaired knees -- is the only player who was available to the United States who could have taken that feeling inside of us away. His presence, his demeanor, his anger, his power, his meanness, the messages he sends when he plays … that's what is missing.

How could he be so selfish? He led the NBA in MORP (Meaness Over Replacement Player) and Messages Sent During Games, but he didn't come to Beijing. Benedict Stoudemire if you ask me.

The U.S. team is made up of great players, but none are mean. They're all too nice. No one is going to elbow an Angolan in the chest for no reason.

Nor should they have to.

There's no one who makes other teams think twice about whether they really want to win; that player who can knock the will and ambition out of a team without throwing a punch;

Like Stoudemire did to his own team in the '07 playoffs when he got suspended for leaving the bench during a fight.

that player who can do something on offense that is so intimidating to the opposing squad, the U.S. doesn't have to play defense for two or three trips down the floor because its opponent is so shook up.

Not even Professor Xavier has that sort of mental dominance over people, so please shut the fuck up already.

Had that been Stoudemire instead of Bosh on the other end of that pass from D-Wade against Australia, flying down the lane for a flush, that game is over. Shrinkage sets in on the other side. Their shots stop falling. Confidence exits their souls as if someone yelled, "Fire!"

No one in the world believes that would've happened, and for you to insininuate that it would is both negligent and insulting.

But after watching the U.S. get past Turkey and Lithuania like they were AAU squads, and then be challenged by Russia and Australia, it is glass-cubicle clear that once the games begin in Beijing, no one is going to be afraid of the U.S. team. Or anyone on it.

Except for the guys who already said that they were intimidated.

True, LBJ can go nuts. Kobe can lose his mind offensively. And those things may reduce an opponent's chances of winning.

Sure, the Redeem Team can score all the points they like, but will that intimidate the other team into losing? No, no, no, and more no.

But they won't crush an international team's spirit the way they do in the NBA. The Wizards and Spurs may be scared, but the world ain't.

Ready yourselves for this week's "Jack's Lesson on Logical Fallacies:"

IF Kobe can intimidate the Spurs and beat them in the Western Conference Finals
AND One of the Spurs best players is on Argentina (one of the better teams in the world)
THEN Kobe's intimidation factor is useless in the Olympics

BUT

IF Amare Stoudemire is so unintimidating that his team lost to the Spurs in the playoffs 2 years in a row
AND One of the Spurs best players is on Argentina (one of the better teams in the world)
THEN The US is considerably worse off without Stoudemire's intimidation factor

QED

Stoudemire's ability to do things by sheer force -- force no other international player, or any other player in the NBA for that matter, possesses -- could have been the difference between this team simply winning the gold medal and this team winning the gold medal while never having less than a 25-point lead after halftime. The difference between destiny and dominance. Redemption and resurrection.

The difference between tomatoes and the French Revolution. Ferarris and cell phone towers.

So as you watch this team go for the gold, pay close attention to what is missing. Visualize the difference Amare Stoudemire would've made. Not that we are looking for perfection, but we are in search of something damn close. And if we're looking for this team to re-establish our true place in the game, by having other nations straight scared of us when they have to go against us, then we may have to wait until 2012 -- when Team USA might be able to convince Stoudemire just how necessary he is.

Or the US could just play defense and unselfish offense, and let Stoudemire stay at home every year.

Because in this sport we call basketball,

Atencion! Si hables espanol, El Scoopo Jackon-o dice "Baloncesto."

in which we are trying to redeem ourselves, why just go for the gold when instilling fear is a much greater reward?

Because the gold medal means we won, and we're better than every other country at basketball. Amare Stoudemire didn't come, so we have no shot at the fear award anyway.

Please clear out your desk and remove all personal effects from your office as soon as possible.

7 comments:

Bengoodfella said...

Why the hell would we want to instill fear? Amare Stoudamire is the one to do it. I thought the Olympics were about good sportsmanship, learning more about another culture and coming together for a common purpose. I guess not. So if the team wins the Gold Medal but have not gotten the Australian's to shit their pants with fear, it is a failure?

I think Scoop Jackson should be ESPN liason for International Relations. I am just going to go ahead and put it out there.

Unknown said...

If they want to instill fear, they should have invited Paul Pierce to be on the team. He'd sit the bench and flash gang signs to the opposing players.

CitizenX said...

Amare would have to instill a whole mamba jamba hotpot of fear, because he don't gots NO kinda D.

Jeff said...

If Stoudamire throws down a dunk instead of Bosh, "the game is over".

Hyperbolic crap.

Scoop Jackson's columns are pointless.

Miserable Bastard said...

No one on the US team is mean? Um, hi, have you ever seen Kobe Bryant? Lots of people know him as "Mr. Nice Guy," right?

Also, when reading Scoop's take on Stoudamire's defensive prowess, it seems quite possible that the only time he's ever seen him play is on NBA Live 2006.

Anonymous said...

Yo Scoop - Since AS declined to play why not recruit Suge Knight? I am sure just prior to the medal voting the judges will surely elect the US BBall team the gold after being dangled out of a window.

Anonymous said...

It's simple, really. They aren't thirsty.