As Jerry Seinfeld said, sports fans are just Rooting for detergent.
But sports fans have very different reactions to which the washing cycle begins.
The superb exchange of basketball (I suppose that I am not Luka Doncic at Lakers And Anthony Davis at the Mavericks (many say that the MAVs were made), prompted the Sun, Kevin Durant striker, to make an observation which is true for all the professional sports leagues: when the player wants a new team, c ‘ is a problem. When the team wants a new player, It’s not serious.
“Players are held at a different level of loyalty and commitment to a program but organizations Do not be at this same standard from the outside, ”said Duane Rankin during Republic of Arizona.
During right. It happens all the time. Teams can do what they want. Fans may not like the result, but they never question teams’ right to do what they want when it comes to treating their players as interchangeable parts in a machine. But when this same interchangeable part would like to go to a different machine, fans denounce their selfishness and their lack of commitment to the cause.
This does not change the end result. Fans will always hover the player in a new shirt, even when the team is the one who decided to change the detergent. Fans of Giants, for example, now hate the ball carrier Stroke) That the giants have chosen to let him walk.
If Barkley had been the only one to agitate openly for a new team, it would have been worse.
It’s strange. It’s unfair. But that’s how it is. The loyalty of fans to laundry leads them to accept the team’s decisions to recover their colors much more easily than they will accept the player’s efforts to lose them.
Will it ever change? Players have become more empowered to find their favorite destinations in basketball. But, however, a player in any sport takes more flak to act in the best interest of the player than the team only does exactly the same.
The best (and worse) example of the NFL comes from the project. This year, it has become clearer than ever that certain quarters have been deleted if they are not ruined by their first stops in professional football (Sam Darnold, Geno Smith, Baker Mayfield). But if incoming prospects should try to avoid what most considers as a Harry Potter style sorting hat binding them to supposed destinations which should be accepted as a Honor and privilege instead of a curse and difficultiesMost fans and many in the media would direct insults.
Hopefully the day will arrive when former college players with a bank account that bursts from Nile Money seams that are not spent will be more willing to say to a team with a dysfunction experience they would prefer to start their careers in different linen – and that they will not wear the shirt at all if the team chooses to write them anyway.