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Thursday, December 17, 2020

Giannis Antetokounmpo Displays Loyalty and Leadership

Giannis Antetokounmpo is not LeBron James or Kevin Durant--at least, not yet. James and Durant have each won multiple NBA titles and multiple NBA Finals MVPs; their basketball resumes are complete, though they may still add even more accomplishments before their playing days are over. Antetokounmpo has already joined James and Durant in the regular season MVP club, but Antetokounmpo has yet to advance to the NBA Finals, let alone win a championship.

Antetokounmpo also differs from James and Durant in terms of how he approaches the championship quest. After spending seven seasons in Cleveland, James fled to create a super team in Miami. James' Cavaliers had reached the 2007 NBA Finals, had posted the best regular season record in the NBA in 2009 and 2010, and might have returned to the Finals again had James not quit during the 2010 Eastern Conference semifinals versus the Boston Celtics. James won two championships in Miami, and then he fled Miami--fearing that his super team might be fraying at the edges--to build a new super team in Cleveland. James won one championship in Cleveland, and then he fled Cleveland to play for the L.A. Lakers. As usual, James sought to build a super team, or at least a super duo, and his blatant recruitment of then-Pelicans forward Anthony Davis put two franchises in a holding pattern for a year before resulting in James capturing his fourth NBA title.

Similarly, Durant fled Oklahoma City after spending nine seasons with that franchise, joining a Golden State team that had already won the 2015 title and had just lost in the 2016 NBA Finals after overcoming a 3-1 Western Conference Finals deficit versus Durant's Oklahoma City Thunder. Instead of trying to beat the champions, Durant joined the champions to form a super team. Durant won two titles with Golden State before fleeing to Brooklyn, where he has formed a super duo with Kyrie Irving.

In contrast, after winning back to back MVPs in 2019 and 2020 while also leading the Milwaukee Bucks to the NBA's best record in both of those seasons, Antetokounmpo did not seek greener pastures despite the Bucks failing to win the title during either of those campaigns. Antetokounmpo spent the first seven years of his career in Milwaukee, and he just signed a five year, $228 million supermax contract extension with the Bucks. Antetopkounmpo is not running from the challenge of building a championship program. In that sense, he is following in the footsteps of old school champions such as Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas, who each helped build one franchise from the ground up. To be fair, free agency did not exist at that time in the format that it does now, but on the other hand superstars can almost always force their way out if they really want to go somewhere else.

Antetokounmpo's choice to take a brave and honorable path does not guarantee that he will win a title, but his loyalty and leadership are laudable, and stand in marked contrast to the examples set by James and Durant--and the example currently being set by James Harden, who is trying to force his way out of Houston with three years/over $130 million left on his contract. Player empowerment is laudable to an extent--and the power balance was previously out of whack in favor of the owners--but there is a big difference between having the ability to become a free agent versus reneging on a signed agreement that still has several years remaining; the latter is what Harden is attempting to do, and he is wrong for doing so. Harden's contract stipulates that the team has to pay him no matter how poorly he performs year after year in the playoffs, but in return he also has a duty of loyalty to play hard and fulfill his end of the bargain for the duration of his contract with the Rockets; acting and speaking in a way designed to force the team to trade him is, in essence if not in law, breaching his duty to the team. 

Harden puts up gaudy individual regular season numbers, but Houston's playoff record during his tenure with the team is not exceptional. Further, while a recent ESPN article made specific allegations about how Harden has bent the Rockets' franchise to his will in a manner that is not conducive to team success, inside information is not required to figure out the problem, as I wrote in my analysis of the Russell Westbrook-John Wall trade: "Harden does not want to be challenged, does not accept constructive criticism, and refuses to alter his 'dribble, dribble, dribble' playing style even though this style has repeatedly flamed out during the playoffs. Harden and Westbrook did not have as many public blowups as Harden did with Howard and Paul, but it is known that Westbrook challenged Harden to play harder and to play less carelessly, and it is also known that Harden did not appreciate those critiques. It is likely impossible to get the return for Harden that the Rockets would want--they value him much more highly than any other team in the league does--so when Harden clashes with another All-Star the other All-Star has to go."

Houston rewarded Harden with a huge contract, and the franchise has catered to Harden's every whim, which has likely not been in the long term best interest of the team or the player (assuming that the goal is winning a championship). It is not a good look for Harden to try to force his way out of town, but it is hilarious that Harden is reportedly seeking to be either reunited for his former teammate Durant or to be paired in Philadelphia with Joel Embiid; in other words, Harden has figured out that what I wrote about him when he left Oklahoma City is true: he is not well suited to being the best player on a championship team, and he is best suited to being the second (or even third) option.   

Harden deserves to finish out his career muddling through the mess that his sense of entitlement--and Houston's acquiescence to his sense of entitlement--has created, but if Harden gets his wish and is traded the only thing better than watching Harden have to submit to being Durant's second option would be reuniting Harden with Daryl Morey. The Philadelphia 76ers have not tanked to the top, but it would be delightful to watch Morey try to win a title with Joel Embiid and James Harden as the team's top two options. Embiid and Harden are both talented players, but neither one has the necessary mentality to be the best player on a championship team, nor is either player likely to willingly accept second option status. The soundbites from Morey, Embiid, and Harden prior to, during, and after that squad being eliminated from the playoffs without reaching the Eastern Conference Finals would be priceless comedy gold, as the "stat guru" Morey assures us that Harden is better than Michael Jordan, the brittle and mercurial Embiid is a prize worth tanking for years to get, and this is the best duo in 76ers--if not pro basketball--history. Embiid's empty trash talking and Harden's grumpiness after his annual playoff chokes would add further hilarity to the mix.

Antetokounmpo may retire without winning a championship ring, but his approach to his life and to his career is a breath of fresh air in a world overrun with people who seek immediate self-gratification without any consideration of the long term effects on others.

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posted by David Friedman @ 9:52 PM

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Monday, December 14, 2020

Rest in Peace William "Bird" Averitt, 1973 NCAA Scoring Champion and 1975 ABA Champion

William "Bird" Averitt, who led the NCAA in scoring before becoming a key contributor for the 1975 ABA Champion Kentucky Colonels, passed away on Saturday December 12 at the age of 68. A 1995 car accident left Averitt partially paralyzed, and he battled a variety of health problems during the past 25 years.

Averitt was nicknamed Bird because of his slight build (6-1, 170 pounds). He was a Kentucky high school star before going to Providence in 1970. At that time, freshmen were not eligible for varsity competition. As a sophomore, Averitt broke the school's single season scoring record by averaging 28.9 ppg, and then as a junior Averitt scored 33.9 ppg to lead the nation in scoring while winning the West Coast Conference Player of the Year award. Averitt averaged 31.4 ppg in his two varsity seasons at Pepperdine, the 11th highest career scoring average in NCAA Division I history at that time. Averitt set West Coast Conference single game, single season, and career scoring records, and he was inducted in the West Coast Conference Hall of Fame in 2017.

He was selected in both the NBA Draft and the ABA Draft, and he began his professional career with the ABA's San Antonio Spurs, averaging 11.5 ppg as a rookie in 1973-74. Averitt was acquired by the Kentucky Colonels, and he averaged 13.1 ppg for Kentucky during the 1974-75 regular season (fourth on the team, trailing Hall of Famers Artis Gilmore, Dan Issel, and Louie Dampier) and 9.9 ppg during the playoffs. The Colonels won the ABA Championship after defeating the Indiana Pacers--the Boston Celtics of the ABA--four games to one in the ABA Finals in a continuation of the Interstate 65 rivalry between those two proud franchises.

How good was that 1975 Kentucky team? That squad not only had three Hall of Fame players (plus Hall of Fame contributor Hubie Brown as head coach), but the 1975 NBA Champion Golden State Warriors declined two challenges to play the Colonels; the Colonels had to settle for a 93-90 preseason win versus the Warriors in 1975.

Averitt averaged a career-high 17.9 ppg for the Colonels during the 1975-76 season, the last campaign before the ABA-NBA merger. The Colonels did not join the merged league, and the Buffalo Braves acquired Averitt's rights. Averitt played two NBA seasons, averaging 8.3 ppg.

I never met Averitt, nor did I have the opportunity to interview him, but I know that he was a beloved and respected person and player throughout the ABA family--and the ABA players most definitely formed a family in an enduring way seldom seen in professional sports.

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posted by David Friedman @ 12:29 AM

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