"It was a great game. Both teams played hard."
"It was a great game. Both teams played hard."
"It was a great game. Both teams played hard."
This is how Rasheed Wallace answered every press question a year ago. This should have been a clue that the man had a hell of a lot more on his mind than hoops. Now we have gotten the message.
He has earned more technical fouls than Dennis Rodman with Tourretts Syndrome. He has smoked more weed than the parking lot at a Cypress Hill Concert. But to truly earn the ire of Il Padrino David Stern, you must speak your mind. In a wild, free-ranging interview with the Portland Oregonian, the man called the leader of the 'Jail-blazers' blew the doors off the New York league offices.
Wallace expressed is view that the league is basically a sweat-shop with fluffier towels.
"I ain't no dumb-ass n----- out here. I'm not like a whole bunch of these young boys out here who get caught up and captivated into the league," Wallace, 29, said. "No. I see behind the lines. I see behind the false screens. I know what this business is all about."
Wallace then took a shot at NBA commissioner David Stern and his $8 million a year contract. "I know the commissioner of this league makes more than three-quarters of the players in this league."
He then articulated in no uncertain terms that the league banks on drafting the young and the ignorant to keep the league afloat. " In my opinion, they just want to draft n----- who are dumb and dumber -- straight out of high school. That's why they're drafting all these high school cats, because they come into the league and they don't know no better. They don't know no better, and they don't know the real business, and they don't see behind the charade. ...They look at black athletes like we're dumb-ass n------. It's as if we're just going to shut up, sign for the money and do what they tell us."
Stern shot back "Mr. Wallace's hateful diatribe was ignorant and offensive to all NBA players.. I refuse to enhance his heightened sense of deprivation by publicly debating with him. Since Mr. Wallace did not direct his comments at any particular individuals other than me, I think it best to leave it to the Trail Blazers organization - and its players and fans - to determine the attitudes by which they wish to be defined."
The press has been quick to jump on this as the "latest in a series of embarrassing episodes for the 'Jail Blazers' as they are now affectionately known. Wallace's words have been lumped in with the team's litany of marijuana arrests and 'paraphernalia' charges. Yes, there is no doubt that the Blazers make Cheech and Chong look like Donnie and Marie, but Stern's smear only proves Wallace's point: the folks who sign the NBA checks don't really care what these young men have to say unless it comes out in saccharine clich
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