Saturday, August 7th, 2010 at 12:34 pm  |  11 responses

Why Dave Zirin wrote Bad Sports

James Dolan: The Inspiration…

by Dave Zirin

I was inspired to write Bad Sports because of one person and one person only. It wasn’t a mentor, friend, or family member. It was James Dolan, owner of the New York Knicks. I grew up in New York City, bleeding the orange and royal blue. I had a Bernard King jersey nailed to my wall and even had posters of players on other teams as long as a Knick was playing D. We would take the B train to Madison Square Garden and it felt like we were entering the Eden of the hoops. For ten bucks we saw Magic, Bird, Julius, and the majesty that was Kareem. I was convinced that I’d be down with the Knicks until death, passing this dolanlove down to my kids like a family heirloom.

You see where this is going, right? Over the last decade I’ve watched the Knicks become a punchline of a franchise, all while hawking tickets above and beyond what a working person can afford. I’ve seen the blame for this state of affairs shift from Scott Layden to Isiah Thomas to Stephon Marbury. Now the papers even blame LeBron for not wanting to entrust his future to this team. There is only one person who was in charge of maintaining the integrity of this team and his name is James Dolan,
and he has failed.

The dream in sports is to have an owner who leads a winning franchise with grace and class. The Rooney family who command the Pittsburgh Steelers are the prototype. If you can’t have the Rooneys, most fans would want a winning team even if the boss spits on the floor. We would trade our soul for a home team like the Lakers led by Dr. Jerry Buss winning with a kind of shabby Runyonesque sneer. After that there is the often duplicated, rarely imitated Steinbrenner model: win but feeling somewhat queasy about who is pulling the strings. Then we would settle for the lovable losers: the owner who genuinely cares about his or her community. The late Abe Pollin who owned the Washington Wizards presided over decades of futility but people perceived him to be a person of dignity.

At the bottom of the food chain we have James Dolan. Dolan is by all accounts a rager, a screamer, a narcissist and someone who has helped create a work environment that is by some accounts as agreeable to women as a Girls Gone Wild video shoot.

“Jim actually doesn’t care whether you love him or hate him, as long as you know him,” says one former Garden executive. “Why else does he sit in the very front row? Why else does he come in late? He wants everyone to know: I am in charge.”

What he is actually in charge of is another question.

In an ordered, sensible universe, the NBA team out of New York City would be America’s Team. Basketball is the city game and without New York City, basketball might still be a game played in peach baskets. It was the city — through the Irish, Jews, and African Americans — who took a game designed by Dr. James Naismith to give idle college students something to do over the winter, and gave it a soul. The New York Knicks should be representing that soul at the professional level. Instead, they need an exorcist.

The team plays at Madison Square Garden, known as “the World’s Most Famous Arena.” Like the Yankees and Mets, they have financial resources that other teams in the NBA could only envy. But the Knicks are a nightmare. They have had 8 straight seasons losing at least 50 games. They haven’t been relevant in 15 years. They have spent money like a coked-up 1980s stock broker. They have been less a basketball team than a reality program, with a series of off-court incidents that put a proud franchise to shame. And for all of that, and then some, we can thank the man in charge, who in his own words makes every
decision, James Dolan.

But don’t take my word for it. Commissioner David Stern, who would sooner shave his head with a cheese grater than
criticize a resident of the owner’s box, actually said of the Knicks “they’re not a model of intelligent management.”

James Dolan has taken that sacred strand that connects the team and the city and flossed his teeth with it. I was  among the many who, even though it hurt,  simply said, Enough.

But now I’m singing a different tune with this book. I don’t want to reject the Knicks. I want to reclaim them. These are the facts: The Knicks were ours before they were ever James Dolan’s. If Dolan wants to continue his position as owner of the team, there need to be some changes. Tickets need to be affordable again. Beer shouldn’t cost as much as a meal. A fan — a people’s representative — should be put on the board of directors. And he needs to back off the day-to-day operations and let the basketball people do their jobs. As for the fans, we need to start adopting the mentality that European soccer fanatics have about their teams. In Europe, the owner is merely in charge of maintaining the team for the next generation. But the game belongs to the fans, and woe to any owner who would forget it. That’s the way it is over there. That’s the way it should be over here.

In the name of Willis Reed, Walt Frazier, Bernard King, Patrick Ewing, John Starks, and everyone who left it all on the Garden floor: it’s time for a change.

For more from Dave pick up any issue of SLAM, or go to his website here. You can buy Bad Sports, his latest book, here.

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  • http://www.twitter.com/gerardhimself Gerard Himself

    Truer words haven’t been spoken. (although they haven’t been relevant for 10 years, not 15)

  • Alan

    You can substitute the New York Rangers and it would be equally true. But at least Thomas is back and maybe he can lay the blame back on him.

  • total scrotal implosion

    i dont care about the knicks

  • hammer

    Excellent points dave. I grew up n the 90′s watching those knicks teams. I was never a knick fan by any means. Grew up a bulls fan and still proud 2 b a bulls fan 2 this day. I remember watching those knicks teams and I absolutely cringed when they had 2 face my bulls n the playoffs. They were tough. I remember watching their home games live and msg would b rocking! Loud as hell! That was a city that was certainly proud of their team. 2 c them now is like comparing them 2 the nightmare on elm street and friday the 13th movies. The couple 1st ones were classics but then it just got ridiculous! @ the same time tho, I didn’t like how they tried 2 “buy” their way back n2 contention. They sacrificed a good 3-4 yrs by shredding their payroll n hopes of landing a couple superstars this summer. N the end they got amare,not exactly what they were hoping 4. Meanwhile the bulls shredded payroll and @ the same time were making it n2 the playoffs. And managed 2 have a pretty successful summer n the free agency market. I would have liked 2 c the knicks remain competitive 4 the gr8 fans of new york. They deserve much much better than what they have had 4 the past decade.

  • hammer

    Would like 2 clarify what I just posted. What I meant 2 say was that I cringed when my bulls had 2 face the knicks. Not the other way around. I hated them cuz ny was so tough,were a ligitimate threat 2 dethrone the bulls and were a championship caliber team. Hated them but I had 2 respect them.

  • Hay

    I’m not a knick fan, but i AM always inspired by Willis Reed. Watching how that Dolan guy does this every year, i feel like he’s not giving respect to the history.. put him out will ya

  • http://twitter.com/kevinchung Kevin

    great article.. well-written and definitely worth writing about.

  • http://www.triplejunearthed.com/dacre Dacre

    great article – wake me up though when the Knicks are relevant once more in the L.

  • MikeC.

    Dolan is a scumsucking pissbag. Just when it looks like things are slowly turning and there’s a flicker of hope, Dolan takes a piss all over it. I feel as if Dolan just pissed on my dinner and said “Eat it! I know you will!”

  • ClydeSays

    Great piece, Dave. I moved to the city to go to school and never left. I’m a Celtics fan, but I was always impressed by Knicks fans whenever I went to the Garden. The team could be down by 20, but as long as the team showed hustle, the fans would cheer, even in late in the season meaningless games. Those fans deserve better than what Dolan has thrown together over the past two decades. This Isiah thing is just the latest screw up. Another incompetent executive getting rewarded by the Knicks. Just another slap in the face to any working man who’s bought an overpriced tickets…

  • http://dez@nba.com dez

    what are we meant to do about it? i vote, ‘assassination’. whose with me?

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