writer touches on the hot subject of race with these words...
"The NBA is in trouble and I don't think there is much dispute about that.
Attendance was down last year and is slightly down so far this season.
Although basketball is supposed to be a team game, it has become more
one-on-one in the NBA than a boxing match. The style has changed and it is
a definite turnoff.
But a major problem with the NBA, one that is virtually never spoken about
honestly, is the issue of race. I have no hard-core evidence. But based on
my past experience in writing about sports, I know that whites ascribe very
different characteristics to black athletes than they do white ones. I also
make a habit of asking every white sports fan I know whether they watch
the NBA. In virtually every instance, they say they once watched the game
but no longer do. When I ask them if it has anything to do with the racial
composition, they do their best to look indignant. But my guess is they felt
very differently about the game when Larry Bird and John Stockton were
playing.
It boils down to this: Are whites losing interest in a game in which the
number of white American players not only continues to dwindle, but no
longer features a superstar?
I don't think talking about any of this makes me a racist. I believe it makes
me a realist. White fans want white superstars, or in the case of the NBA, at
least one white American superstar. Unless the ghosts of Bird and John
Havlicek and Jerry West return to the floor, that isn't going to happen. And
since it isn't going to happen, the NBA will continue to struggle with an
identity crisis that no one wants to publicly acknowledge."
Bissinger goes on to lazily assert that without marquee, American-born,
white NBA players, the league doesn't give white fans anyone to "relate" to,
thus alienating a large swath of the potential ticket buying public."
Interesting.....anyone with a comment??
I watch if my team (the Bulls) are doing well...I have no particular feelings at all about the race of whoever's playing...but guess what??
The "marquee teams in almost all the biggest markets have been struggling of late no matter what the racial composition of their team...
Knicks, Bulls, Pistons, Sixers, etc....all among the leagues biggest markets have struggled for several years.....
I think that has more to do with the drop-off in fans than race does....that and the hoggish one-on-one play...
"The NBA is in trouble and I don't think there is much dispute about that.
Attendance was down last year and is slightly down so far this season.
Although basketball is supposed to be a team game, it has become more
one-on-one in the NBA than a boxing match. The style has changed and it is
a definite turnoff.
But a major problem with the NBA, one that is virtually never spoken about
honestly, is the issue of race. I have no hard-core evidence. But based on
my past experience in writing about sports, I know that whites ascribe very
different characteristics to black athletes than they do white ones. I also
make a habit of asking every white sports fan I know whether they watch
the NBA. In virtually every instance, they say they once watched the game
but no longer do. When I ask them if it has anything to do with the racial
composition, they do their best to look indignant. But my guess is they felt
very differently about the game when Larry Bird and John Stockton were
playing.
It boils down to this: Are whites losing interest in a game in which the
number of white American players not only continues to dwindle, but no
longer features a superstar?
I don't think talking about any of this makes me a racist. I believe it makes
me a realist. White fans want white superstars, or in the case of the NBA, at
least one white American superstar. Unless the ghosts of Bird and John
Havlicek and Jerry West return to the floor, that isn't going to happen. And
since it isn't going to happen, the NBA will continue to struggle with an
identity crisis that no one wants to publicly acknowledge."
Bissinger goes on to lazily assert that without marquee, American-born,
white NBA players, the league doesn't give white fans anyone to "relate" to,
thus alienating a large swath of the potential ticket buying public."
Interesting.....anyone with a comment??
I watch if my team (the Bulls) are doing well...I have no particular feelings at all about the race of whoever's playing...but guess what??
The "marquee teams in almost all the biggest markets have been struggling of late no matter what the racial composition of their team...
Knicks, Bulls, Pistons, Sixers, etc....all among the leagues biggest markets have struggled for several years.....
I think that has more to do with the drop-off in fans than race does....that and the hoggish one-on-one play...
Comment