THE DUMBEST TAKE YOU’LL SEE ON ESPN THIS YEAR

by John Walters

The New York Nets have hired two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Steve Nash as their head coach, a move that Stephen A. Smith publicly decries as “white privilege.”

Let’s unravel SAS’ words, while acknowledging that he just gift-wrapped a “Kick Me, I’m ESPN!” sign to the bros over at OutClick The Coverage. First, SAS mentions the black men who were passed over for the job:

  1. Mark Jackson: Who had NEVER been a coach when the Golden State Warriors hired him in 2011, handed him the keys to what would become the most talented NBA team of the decade, and Jackson promptly failed to get them to the NBA Finals in any of the three years he was their head coach. Moreover, Jackson actually seemed bothered by Stephen Curry’s success. What happened after the Dubs canned Jackson and replaced him with Steve Kerr, who is a spiritual brother of Nash’s (even the names are similar)? They went to five consecutive NBA Finals.
  2. Tyronn Lue: Had never been a head coach until the Cavaliers elevated him to replace David Blatt, who was not smart enough to let LeBron be LeBron. Don’t know if Lue’s worthy or not, only that he’s smart enough to keep his mouth shut when LeBron is coaching speaking.

3. Sam Cassell: I have no idea if Cassell, currently an assistant with the Clippers, will be a good or bad NBA head coach. I do know that the head coach of the Clippers, Doc Rivers, is a terrific coach who, like Nash, had never coached at any level before he was hired as an NBA head coach by the Orlando Magic in 1999.

Nash, a two-time NBA MVP and one of the best players and teammates the league has ever seen, has unimpeachable character. He has always been able to relate to players of all sizes and colors. He has international life experience and will relate to players who were not born in the USA. And he will have two of the league’s top 10 players, at least before they were injured, in his starting five. So, yes, he is stepping into an excellent situation.

Will he be a great NBA coach? It’s hard to say given all the talent he’ll have around him. Phil Jackson had Michael and Scottie and then Shaq and Kobe and yes, he did alright for himself. Red Auerbach had all those Celtics greats. Gregg Popovich suddenly wasn’t as great an NBA coach without his International Trio.

Great players help make great coaches. But as far as “deserving it” goes, both Mark Jackson and Steve Kerr had never been head coaches anywhere before the Warriors hired each of them the past decade. We know who did better, and it’s not close. And it’s not because Kerr is white that he did better. But to say that Nash’s hiring is “white privilege” while also “congratulating” him on getting the job, well, that’s just b.s.

And bringing in the murder of George Floyd to punctuate your argument is simply exploiting his death. Nash’s player bona fides are far superior to those of Jackson or Rivers, both of whom landed an NBA head coaching job without ever having coached, either.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING!

by John Walters

Political Football

We have to give President Trump credit for this one: a brilliant political maneuver, staging a chat with Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren. Trump basically went Sting in “Money For Nothing” (I want my/I want my/I want my MTV!) while the newly minted commish did the Joey Bosa arms emoji. (Oooh, that’s good. We’ll use that professionally soon.)

See, the president knows that the Big Ten occupies important swing states such as Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. States that could be the key to the 2020 election. And he knows that people in these states love their college football. And so here’s the president, the guy who’s supposed to be reminding everyone to strap on their seat belt and go the speed limit but who is instead asking how come we can’t go faster as he sticks his head through the sun roof.

But those folks won’t care about public health. And he knows it. They just want their football. And now Trump has come out publicly and basically said, “I want you to have your football, too.” Brilliant political maneuver, if nothing else.

If the Big Ten caves and does return, Trump takes a victory lap. If not and the SEC and ACC shine (and if cases don’t skyrocket), he takes a victory lap. Notice that he didn’t phone Larry Scott (although who can blame him? Who wants to speak to Larry Scott?). He knows he’ll never get the votes in California, Oregon or Washington anyway and besides, people out West are much better able to cope without college football.

We listened to Scott Van Pelt muse aloud the other night about how bad the Big Ten might look if it remains on the sideline while the other conferences play. What SVP did not do is muse about how bad the SEC, ACC and Big 12 will look if a number of its players contract the virus. Curious, that. It’s fine to muse as SVP did but without a counterbalance, you might almost think that SVP is rooting for one outcome more than the other.

Meanwhile, Alabama coach Nick Saban’s walk to Foster Hall has created some embittered Tide fans. The Tide is Turning? And in South Bend, Notre Dame Football’s official Twitter account tweeted a “Black Lives Matter” statement that, alas, drew the wrath of many an NDNation poster. We’re not on the Twitter so we can’t reproduce any of this (gladly), but if you are go to Notre Dame Football, find the tweet, and then look at the replies below. Who knew Matt Schlapp had so many surrogate Twitter accounts?

Goodbye, Newman!

(Newman: From WFU to WTF?)

At Georgia, quarterback Jamie Newman, a transfer from Wake Forest who was slated to start for the Bulldogs, has decided to opt out of the 2020 season without ever playing a down between the hedges.

Thus, the presumptive starter will be USC transfer J.T. Daniels, who lost his starting job for the Trojans last season when he suffered a season-ending injury in the first half of their opener. Daniels’ replacement at ‘SC, Kedon Slovis, who would’ve had an outside shot at the Heisman this season, won’t play at all because all of the Pac-12 schools have chosen not to play.

The football does indeed take funny bounces.

There’s Only Us/There’s Only This/Forget Regret/Or Life Is Yours To Miss*

*On second thought the judges prefer “Walk Like An Eviction”

If you earn less than $99,000 a year (sorry, Susie B.), are a renter (sorry again, Susie B.) and have suffered financial losses this year (failing to invest in Zoom does not count), you won’t have to pay the rent before December 31st. President Trump signed one of those things he signed without needing approval from Congress that says the rent is not due for the next four months.

Of course, this is not rent forgiveness. It’s simply rent abeyance. You’ll have to pay all four months plus the next month’s rent come January 1st. Happy New Year!

Ballooney Bin

Yesterday, magician David Blaine floated above what looks to be Lake Powell in Arizona. We still think the Taiwan Toddler’s stunt was cooler. And certainly more spontaneous.

Tower Of Babel-On

Today is apparently Skyscraper Day. Trees are, of course, the original skyscrapers so let’s give them their props. As for man-made types, the Great Pyramid at Giza (Egypt) was the world’s tallest man-made structure (455 feet tall) at the time of Christ’s birth.

You Bible readers may recall that Jesus spent his earliest years in Egypt (following his birth in Bethlehem) and thus, who knows, Joseph and Mary may have loaded up the family donkey and taken their Son on a family vacation to see the Great Pyramid. But there is no historical record of such.

The tallest building in the world currently is the Burj Khalifa, which is not a rapper from Pittsburgh but an edifice in Dubai. It stands 2,722 feet tall and has been the planet’s tallest man-made structure since its construction finished in 2009.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING!

by John Walters

(And look who’s not wearing a mask)

Make America Hate Again

President Trump visited Kenosha, made no real attempt to speak to the parents of Jacob Blake, answered a question that was directed to a pair of black pastors, and continued his program of behaving as if none of this would be happening if he were president (he is president).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evjG02nY-6E

You know who keeps showing up in video clips doing terrific work on the president’s shameless gas lighting (I mean, besides Daniel Dale?). CNN’s Brianna Keilar. In the clip above, she points out not only the egregious disinformation campaign by the White House but also by Fox News.

Kenosha: A Bunch Of Dopes (And Criminals)

This was sent to us as a comment but it’s so good we thought we’d share it here so that no one misses it. Called “Anatomy Of A Catastrophe,” it shows how the stupidity that led to two deaths, another person being shot, and a 17 year-old being charged with two counts of homicide was really just a pandemic of moron behavior from all parties.

Venus Descending

At the U.S. Open Venus Williams, 40, loses her opening match in straight sets to Karolina Muchova, 6-3, 7-5. Is Williams, a winner of seven Grand Slam singles titles, done?

Little sis won her opening match.

Rockies > Wasatch

In the NBA’s first-round Battle of the Mountain Ranges, the Denver Nuggets outlast the Utah Jazz in Game 7, 80-78, on a Nikola Jokic tear-drop hook shot with :22 on the clock.

The Serbian seven-footer finished with 30 points, though teammate Jamal Murray was the series’ breakout star. Bring on the Clippers!

Gas Up!

One of our favorite sites, The Discoverer Blog, has put out a list of “The Best Road Trip In Each State.” Above, Seward Highway in Alaska. Though we imagine Alaska has a plethora of fantastic road trips.

IT’S ALL HAPPENING!

Congrats on your AMZN 100-bagger, Susie B. If you’re not there this morning, you’re darn close.

by John Walters

Zoombie Apocalypse

Was there an easier Pandemic Portfolio (can we trademark that?) pick than Zoom (ZM)? There’s no company that went from “Never heard of it” to “I’ll send you an invite link” more swiftly in the past six months and so, yesterday, after the market closed, Zoom announced its quarterly earnings report.

Turns out the company did more in revenue in the most recent quarter than it did in all of 2019. Shares of the stock, which were up more than 8% yesterday, soared more than 40% after hours and in pre-market trading.

You could have bought a share of Zoom for around $115 in April. Today the price of a share will open around $445. It’s the wild, wild West here in portfolio land.

A Pad-Rays World Series?

The hottest team in the American League? The Tampa Bay Rays, who have, with last night’s win at Yankee Stadium, have taken 7 of 8 from the Yankees this season. Tampa Bay has the A.L.’s best record at 25-11?

In the N.L., the Dodgers still have the best overall record (26-10) but down the coast, the San Diego Padres (22-15) are baseball’s most fun team. And they just added Cleveland Indians ace Mike Clevinger before the deadline (the Indians are in first place, so Clevinger must have been some kind of clubhouse cancer for the Tribe to dispose of him).

Second-year Padres shortstop Fernando Tatis, Jr., is tied for the MLB lead in home runs (13) and lead baseball in RBI. The Padres have long been baseball’s most forgettable club, at least west of Miami. Not this season.

A Murder In Portland

(More murders to come)

From what we’ve seen in Kenosha, and now with this NY Times story containing footage footage of the man being shot to death on the street in Portland, a common theme emerges: all three victims were being aggressors in situations that ultimately led to their deaths.

This is not to say that any of the men “deserved” to die. But when you add warm summer nights, male testosterone, dueling narratives of “justice” versus “law and order,” and then spend an evening mixing that cocktail, what do you expect to happen?

Joseph Rosenbaum, the 36 year-old first victim of Kyle Rittenhouse (we’d say “alleged” but he actually is heard saying, “I shot somebody”), was reaching for the barrel of Rittenhouse’s gun when he was shot five times. Anthony Huber, 26, ran after Rittenhouse in the street as people yelled, “Get that dude!” and “He shot him.” Rittenhouse tripped and fell, Huber awkwardly swung at his head with his skateboard while lunging for his gun, and he too was fatally shot.

In Portland, Aaron Danielson apparently sprayed mace at his assailant before he was shot and killed (the alleged gun man, tall and in a white T-shirt, has yet to be identified or captured).

There’s nothing cinematic about these deaths. People are shot and they fall rather quickly. And they don’t move again. They’re gone. Meanwhile, the president keeps stoking the hatred because exploiting the racial and cultural divide stokes fear in white suburban moms, which is exactly what Trump wants.

We loved this explanation of it all from Trevor Noah, and if you think a late-night comic is in over his head commenting on this, then we suggest you go read Noah’s memoir, Born A Crime. He’s got more life insight into what’s happening than any cable news pundit.

Noah basically says that while no one wants to live in a world of violence, of stores being burned, of looting, that what too many white people fail to understand is that too many of the police (and your president) have broken the social contract. They are no longer “protect and serve” officers. They are “control and dominate” officers (my quotes). And that while no one wants to see looting of stores, too many cops have for too long been looting the bodies of black men.

Finally, Noah makes the excellent point that folks on the right point out that George Floyd had committed crimes. That he was no saint. True, And Floyd had paid for those crimes with jail time. The cop who ended his life had been written up 18 times for his bad behavior but had never paid for any of it. And so if you want to claim that George Floyd’s past led him to that moment, what about Derek Chauvin’s?

Sweet Evolution, Alabama

In Tuscaloosa, Alabama coach Nick Saban leads a march of Crimson Tide football players to protest social injustice. Egads! What will the SEC ball cap bros who faithfully read OutClick The Coverage each morning think?!?

The symbolic March of the loafer-clad Saban and dozens of his players, some clad in “Black Lives Matter” t-shirts, proceeded a short distance from the school’s athletic dorms to Foster Hall, where 57 years ago then-governor George Wallace stood at the door in an attempt to block the entry of two black students.

As far as political tidal shifts go, this may be far more profound than anything Joe Biden said yesterday in Pittsburgh. When you lose the Crimson Tide football team, what do you have left? Jim Harbaugh? Dabo?

Up

What is this, in Taiwan? Is it the filming of a prequel to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon? Do we have the wrong Asian country and was that terribly insensitive of us?

Anyway, there was a kite festival in Taiwan and this three year-old exceeded lofty expectations. Nobody died so it’s all in good fun.