Where Knowledge Rules

Sports & Recreation:

Basketball

Get a Widget for this title

Why the NBA is not what it used to be

No, the NBA isn't what it used to be - but who is? Professional basketball has changed, indeed, but whether for better or worse, well, that depends on one's prejudices, of course, and also on one's experience and perspective.

Those who decry, for example, the violence in the NBA as alarming and unprecedented should read Terry Pluto's estimable "Tall Tales," a chronicle of the early days of pro basketball. Pluto interviews players who recall that games would erupt in fights more often than not, slugfests that sometimes would spill into the stands, where drunken fans taunted the athletes who had to play a whole game of basketbrawl before they could start drinking.

Pluto also touches on the racism that was de rigueur in those days. Black players, no matter how gifted, were systematically blackballed for years, and finally admitted into the league only when a few owners grasped the economic imperatives of it.

Soon, unhappily, the sport got TOO black for America's liking. For that reason among others, NBA games were seldom shown on television in the sixties, and when the ABA came along and offered players another marketplace and bargaining power against tight-fisted owners, those that signed aboard toiled in even greater obscurity.

After the leagues merged, the NBA reached its low ebb in the 1970s. Even in 1980, when Magic Johnson beat Philadelphia with his sublime performance in the final game of the season, interest in the sport was so lukewarm that the game was shown on tape-delay late that night.

Magic and Larry Bird did spark a revival that swept the NBA into its Golden Age, which lingered through the Jordan yearsbut those three players were anomalies, maybe three in the top five of all time. What else did we have during that era? Dennis Rodman, the Bad Boys (with two of the most craven athletes ever, Bill Laimbeer and Isiah Thomas), Jordan going off to play baseball, Shaquille O'Neal showing his astounding lack of basketball skills as Hakeem Olajuwon tap-danced on his head in the NBA Finals.

Today's NBA players are bigger, stronger and faster than ever, and none of them has green hair. They play above the rim, with breathtaking grace and speed, and every time down the court one of themoften Lebron Jamesis apt to do something you've never seen before. Ninety-nine percent of them would rather win a championship than be an All-Star. Yes, some of them are surly and selfish. But given the incredible scrutiny and ceaseless criticism they all undergo, not just from the media but from every casual and ill-informed observer with a beer or a blog and time on his hands, it's a wonder that each and every one of them doesn't snap and run amok in the stands.

We all remember a time when things were better - it was back when our parents were shaking their heads over how much worse things were than in their day.

Learn more about this author, Paul Erland.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Why the NBA is not what it used to be

  • 1 of 19

    by Rubee Kola

    Why the NBA is Not What it used to Be

    Think back to all the great rivalries of the NBA in recent years, and you'll think

    read more

  • 2 of 19

    by Amanda Fox

    The NBA isn't what it used to be because times change and there is no stopping that. Whether the changes in the NBA have

    read more

  • 3 of 19

    by Ronald Millsaps

    Clean As a Whistle?

    If you listened to NBA commissioner David Stern, you likely would hear that the NBA is stronger than

    read more

  • 4 of 19

    by Paul Erland

    No, the NBA isn't what it used to be - but who is? Professional basketball has changed, indeed, but whether for better or

    read more

  • 5 of 19

    by Art West

    When John Havlicek was a kid, all of his friends had bicycles. Havlicek's family was so poor that he could not afford a

    read more

View All Articles on:
Why the NBA is not what it used to be

Add your voice

Know something about Why the NBA is not what it used to be?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

87020

Featured Partner

The Overbrook Foundation

The Overbrook Foundation has partnered with Helium, giving you the chance to write for a cause. Browse Overbrook...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA