Friday, June 10, 2011

WWE FInals Game 3: How the company men do it!

It is no secret that David Stern uses 'company men' to interficiate basketball games and get the results that he wants. In Game 3 of the WWE Basketball Finals, his company men conveniently overlooked Haslem blocking Dirk like a linebacker while Chris Bosh sank what would be the game winning shot.



But before it even gets to the end of the game, the company men keep it close by making up fouls. In this play Wade flops on a rebound that he never had any chance of getting and the refs not only take away the possession from the Mavs, but they give Wade two free throws.


Announcer Jeff Van Gundy discusses Wade fooling the ref. But there was no fooling the ref. The ref called what he wanted to call. Wade just gave him the excuse he needed.

Goons! Hired goons! That's all NBA refs are. 

Bonus shout-out: Van Gundy and fellow announcer Mark Jackson have constantly criticized the officiating throughout WWE Basketball Finals game. And then at one point in Game 4, they agreed that the NBA refs are the best refs in the world.

Really? Is that your version of Heil Stern? The man on the street would be a better ref and you know it! At least bad officiation goes both ways. Stern's agenda is ruining the game and you know it. Don't just kiss ass after the fact because you're sipping more than your fair share of the gravy a-holes.

Have they ever watched an international basketball game? The refs call the game right. Flops are not rewarded. Charges are charges. Blocks are blocks. Moving screens are moving screens. Stop pretending like officiating is an amazingly difficult task. It's not (at least for a significant portion of the population). 

If  WWE Basketball wanted to fix the reffing deficiencies they would. But that is not how the WWE Basketball Leauge works. Heaven forbid a real basketball game breaks out. 

Stern desperately tries to avoid the wrong teams getting the glory (and the lower ratings). In the 2005 Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and Detroit Pistons, the two most fundamentally sound teams in league history squared off. Even Tim Duncan's nickname was 'The Big Fundamental.' 


However, that series was one of the worst rated series in the post-Jordan era. That meant less money for Stern. Sometimes even Stern's company men cannot prevent the undesirable match-ups from occurring. But they will be ever vigilant in favoring the higher rated teams. The entire world knows that.

Congress should step in and make the NBA and the referees independent of each other. That may never happen. But in the meantime we don't need Van Gundy and Jackson giving us the good news and bad news Young Guns 2 style.


What's the bad news? There's only sh*t for commentary.


What's the good news? There's plenty of it!


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