Rashad McCants story from ESPN Insider; is dude blackballed from the L?(link)

cnc

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Warning, this shit is long:
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Credit to RealGM.com for the link to the story.......I didn't realize dude was out of the L :eek:

The story says he getting a shot in the summer league, but damn, from first round pick and team captain to the summer league in 4 years:confused:


http://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=1037228


The Timberwolves' bus pulls up to the Ritz-Carlton in Marina del Rey following an afternoon practice. Players still in workout togs file off. Some have draped towels around their necks, others have fixed ice packs to knees and shoulders. Everything around them seems small: the scurrying bellhop, a lone autograph seeker, an elderly couple in need of directions. It is one of the countless humdrum moments of an NBA season that blur into nothingness.

From a chair inside a dimly lit lounge just off the hotel lobby, Rashad McCants watches his former teammates walk by. He has taken the stroll hundreds of times, but this is the first time he has seen it from the angle of an ex-player. As the Wolves push through the lobby a few of them spot an old pal. "Shaddy!" shouts Corey Brewer, who once battled McCants for minutes. Some wrap him in hugs. McCants grins uncontrollably as he is peppered with questions. Where are you living? When are you coming back? Ryan Gomes offers his new cell number. Al Jefferson sits down to reminisce. He and McCants laugh about the time Kevin McHale put a garbage can by the court after learning that Jefferson had had a birthday party the night before.

Then, just as quickly as they flocked to him, the players head to their rooms. Elevator doors close. A December Santa Ana wind rushes through the now-vacant lobby. Outside, McCants hands over his claim check. "What room is it under?" the valet asks.

"Al Jefferson."

Good try. "That'll be $12," the valet says.

Every profession has its sore thumbs, employees who stick out because they can't fit in, underpaid, underappreciated or unloved. Or maybe they're just perpetually pissed off. Still, unless you happen to share a cubicle with one, they are someone else's problem. But who wants to pay to see a bristly millionaire play a game? More important, who wants to pay him? Especially in a sport like basketball, where on-court chemistry is paramount. In the confines of an NBA locker room, one sourpuss can send a season into a tailspin. The slightest frown can fray a relationship, label a guy or halt a career.

Just ask McCants. He'll tell you that gainful employment in the NBA is a delicate thing, easily thrown off kilter by meddling forces, real or imagined. A coach who wants to derail your career, too many visits to the psychiatrist, and, well, suddenly you have a tainted aura that, like an oil spill, grows out of control with no hint of containment.

The common refrain about McCants' predicament is that it has never been about his game. "He's a pure talent with a high basketball IQ," former Wolves GM McHale says of his former shooting guard. "Beautiful stroke, great body, everything. His problem was giving himself up to the team." That view is seconded by many who shared his locker room, whether McCants' under-his-breath mumbles were directed at them or not. "In any line of work you have to know how to talk to people and when to bite your tongue," says Kevin Love, who played with McCants two years ago. "Rashad has a me-against-the-world attitude. You have to get past that if you want to help yourself."


Sye Williams/ESPN The Magazine
Armed with a feathery J and a quick first step, McCants says there isn't a two guard that can stop him.
McCants, meanwhile, wonders how a player can "get $25 million for being just a shooter," or why guys with criminal records -- McCants has never been arrested or suspended -- somehow get more consideration than he does. "I'm out of the league because of facial expressions?" he asks. "Players get arrested or demand trades, and I'm the one they call difficult?"

It's not easy being the guy who frowned himself out of the NBA.

"They say I don't smile," McCants says. "Does that make me a bad person?" In his eyes he's done everything asked of a good teammate. He sees none of the accountability issues everyone else can't stop talking about. What coaches label as sulking McCants says is just being quiet. "Management doesn't see how well I get along with my teammates when we're hanging out together," he says. "They're not interested in that."

So for now he remains in an unusual and scary place: outside looking in. He's 25, jobless and lugging around a toxic rep in the midst of an unforgiving economy. "He has to grow out of his old mentality," says McHale. "If he doesn't, he won't play in this league again."

McCants lives quietly by himself in a two-bedroom apartment in an upscale complex in LA. An Xbox 360 is connected to a 42-inch, swivel-mounted plasma. On a coffee table in front of a gray velour couch, next to a folded half-eaten bag of cool ranch Doritos, lies a threadbare copy of the Nov. 22, 2004, issue of Sports Illustrated. The cover line reads, "Mystery Man." McCants, in his UNC uni, is the subject.

The flesh-and-blood McCants wears basketball shorts and a white tank top. He adjusts his Yankees cap (one of six he owns) and plops down into a chair that matches the couch. It's six weeks into the 2009-10 NBA season and the muted plasma is tuned to SportsCenter. Subs he once shared minutes with now provide the nightly highlights. Any bravado from his playing days is long gone. "I don't watch the NBA," he says in a voice soft and direct. "I haven't reached the point where I can do that."

He hits rewind on a couple of recent humbling experiences. It's the summer of '09 and McCants is growing anxious over a lack of offers, so he undertakes a quest for answers. "I've heard nothing but bad things about you," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra tells him in the midst of an informal run in Miami. At the Vegas Summer League, Mike D'Antoni says he can't give McCants a shot for fear he'd poison the Knicks' locker room. Tar Heel blood brothers Larry Brown and George Karl barely give him the time of day. Some GMs won't even get on a conference call with him. "Everybody said I wasn't a good fit," he says with genuine sadness. "It felt like I had nowhere to turn. It felt like I died."

One final ray of hope quickly vanished. McCants worked out for the Mavericks, and afterward coach Rick Carlisle asked him to see a psychiatrist. "To find out what was wrong with me," McCants says sarcastically. It was the third time a coach had made such a request. During his freshman year at UNC, coach Matt Doherty sent him to see a "friend" who happened to be a shrink. McCants says 10 minutes into the first visit he was told, "There's absolutely nothing wrong with you." Yet, the next season, new Tar Heels coach Roy Williams asked McCants again to make an appointment.


Sye Williams/ESPN The Magazine
"Just because I'm not chipper," McCants says, "like I just drank a pot of coffee, doesn't mean I'm a bad guy."
Carlisle's interest in McCants didn't last long enough for the Mavs to make him an offer, and by New Year's 2010 he'd begun to realize that the best he could do was a 10-day contract. "The fact that nobody wanted me was so frustrating," he says.

So now he's left to try to get back into the game any way he can. "Do I have to change who I am to fit into an organization?" he wonders aloud. "That's what I'm asking myself."

He also has to ask how it all went wrong.

McCants was drafted by Minnesota with the 14th pick in 2005, and his baggage seemed to arrive before he did. McCants had long been perceived as sullen, moody and aloof, and he did nothing to change perceptions in his new town. He barely smiled when introduced to season ticket-holders, while an admonishment from coaches to be on time elicited an exaggerated eye roll. He wanted you to hear that sigh from across the locker room, a reminder that he didn't think he was getting the touches he deserved.

Funny thing is, off the court he presents like any pro his age. There's the Cheshire Cat smile when he puts the smackdown on an opponent in DJ Hero, the boisterous laugh when friends hit his BlackBerry. Some nights, all the bottles go on his tab. "He's just a fun, solid dude," says Jefferson.

In his first two seasons McCants earned an on-court rep that didn't exactly sync up to the profile either: a quick-trigger shooting guard physical enough to defend small forwards. He bonded with the team's superstar, Kevin Garnett, the two frequently working out together after practice. When McCants awoke from knee surgery in 2006, KG was sitting at the foot of the bed. In 2007-08, under first-year coach Randy Wittman, McCants began to blossom, selected by his peers as a team captain. As Minnesota's second option, he routinely made highlight reels. Future All-Star was what they said. At his season-ending interview, Wittman praised his effort. Brimming with optimism, McCants spent the summer in the area, organizing workouts and early-morning sprints for his teammates.

Thinking he was in Minny for life, he bought a four-bedroom house with a big yard 20 minutes from downtown and lined the basement theater with signed jerseys from guys like Kobe and LeBron. Life was good. In New York he was often a guest of Jay-Z's at 40/40. He stood onstage with Lil Wayne, texted with Chris Paul, partied in Miami with Shaq and D-Wade. His exterior, once Velcro, was suddenly Teflon, all the negatives no longer sticking. Or so he thought.

By training camp in September 2008, the mood had shifted. McCants and Wittman were now on very different pages, and with the coach looking to put his stamp on the team, McCants' star quickly faded. He couldn't move without Wittman getting annoyed. It didn't help that McCants dribbled through his legs excessively during shootarounds. And it was hard to miss Wittman peering over his glasses with disapproval at the card games McCants organized on team flights.

Early in the preseason, McCants was driving to the airport when he realized he'd forgotten his Xbox. Knowing his teammates wanted to play on the plane, he drove home to retrieve it. When he finally boarded, three minutes late, Wittman was waiting. A week later the two had a meeting. The coach told McCants that his teammates were complaining about his selfishness. "My heart was beating so fast," says McCants. "I didn't know what the hell was happening." Then came the kicker. "You've got 11 days to prove you belong on the roster," McCants says the coach told him, from then on not speaking to his player. (Wittman denies that the meeting took place. "I have an open-door policy," he says, "and he never walked in to say I was doing him wrong.")

The situation quickly spiraled. Wittman stripped McCants of his captaincy at a team meeting, bestowing the duties on Jefferson, Mike Miller and Randy Foye. "A couple of those guys didn't even want the responsibility," says McCants, who thought Wittman was trying to break him. Stunned and embarrassed gave way to depressed and confused. "Nobody would talk to me," McCants says. "I didn't know what was going on." (Wittman says he doesn't remember the incident. "I don't even recall his being captain," he says. But several players, including Jefferson and Love, say they remember it distinctly.) His minutes withered. "He had a hard time accepting his role," says Wittman, who's now an assistant coach with the Wizards. "He'd put his head down and pout and not necessarily give 100 percent."

But after a 4-15 start, Wittman was fired and replaced by McHale. Owner Glen Taylor addressed McCants in the locker room in front of the whole team. "We all know Randy Wittman didn't like you," said Taylor. "Kevin McHale does." A changing of the guard, though, changed nothing.

On Dec. 30, after a game in Dallas, McCants flew to Vegas to spend New Year's Eve with his then-girlfriend, Khloe Kardashian. The team was off the next day, so he had time to recover, fly back and make a shootaround on Jan. 2. But McHale caught wind of his revelry and, by McCants' lights, the coach was none too pleased. "He didn't like the fact I was dating a celebrity," McCants says. "He thought I wasn't putting basketball first." (McHale insists McCants' personal life was irrelevant: "I'm old. I didn't even know who Khloe Kardashian was.")

McCants was benched for the first 14 games of 2009. By then the team had decided he wasn't in its plans. "At that point they were just doing him wrong," says Jefferson. "And there was no explanation for it." McCants' agent called daily to ask for a trade, and finally, an hour before the deadline, he was shipped off to the Kings.


David Sherman/Getty Images
McCants says McHale (right) took issue with parts of his personal life.
McCants played well for his new team, averaging 10.3 points in 19.4 minutes, but a chip remained firmly planted on his shoulder. "I talked to some people in Sacramento after the fact, and they had the same problems with Rashad," says McHale. But McCants says that in an exit interview, Kings interim coach Kenny Natt told him he wished he could have done more for him. Natt, though, did have a question for McCants: "Has anyone ever told you your body language is bad? You look like you're mad at the world."

"Just because I'm not chipper like I just drank a pot of coffee doesn't mean I'm a bad guy," says McCants. And he does have his supporters. Dwane Casey, McCants' first NBA coach, says he never had a problem with Rashad. And don't get his father, James, started. James, who, with his wife, Brenda, raised Rashad and his two younger sisters in a tidy, middle-class neighborhood in Asheville, N.C., strictly enforced evening curfews and made sure his son did his chores and homework before hitting the blacktop. "He had it together as a kid," James says, "because he knew if he didn't he had to deal with me." James says people often misread his son initially but warm up once they get to know him.

It's a luxury not afforded many guys in the association. What team execs see are not-so-subtle body language cues that scream lack of interest. The slow walk back to the bench for timeouts. The thousand-yard stare. "He had the tendency to disengage," says McHale. "Unless you're incredibly, ridiculously talented, you can't get away with that." Teammates who couldn't break through the facade would go to McHale to ask if they had done something wrong. "I'd tell them, 'That's Rashad, and you just have to deal with it,'" he says. It remains a touchy subject for many involved. "He's a talented guy who played hard," says former teammate Love. "But he seemed to have his own agenda. I'm a fan of his as a player, but maybe not so much as a person." Love turns to his locker neighbor, Brian Cardinal. "Why do you think Rashad is out of the league?" he asks.

"I'm not touching that," Cardinal says before walking away. Another player, who declined to be named, walks up and slaps his own arms. "Because of these right here," he says referring to McCants' tattoos. "He lives by those." On their old teammate's right biceps is written BORN TO BE HATED, on the left DYING TO BE LOVED. "On the floor he was cocky and arrogant a lot of the time," says Foye. "Other times he just kept to himself. His motivations were maybe different than everybody else's." McHale pauses when asked if McCants was interested in making friends. "You know, I don't know."

Down a grimy, narrow street in the Valley crammed with third-rate auto body shops sits a red-brick health club. This is where the baby steps of McCants' comeback are taken. Since November he has worked out six days a week under the watchful eye of training guru Joe Abunassar. On a mild winter afternoon, McCants enters the gym dressed in a skintight black bodysuit and Jordan shorts. There are diamond studs in his ears, and the flat brim of another Yankees cap is cocked to the side. The gait is that of a world-class athlete. And from the broad shoulders to the slim waist, the V-shape torso is what scouts mean when they talk about an NBA body.

McCants' massive hands cradle the ball, covering it like water over the earth's surface. As he begins shooting drills one thing fast becomes evident: This game does not belong on this floor. The near flawless mechanics -- squared shoulders, high release, perfect follow-through -- are designed for an NBA arena. Nowhere in the change-of-direction dribbles and stepbacks is movement wasted. With each feathery shot, his presence here becomes all the more strange. "When I met him I asked what he did to piss everybody off," says Abunassar. "I said, 'You must have been a real ass. Did you blow up somebody's house?'" GMs may not love McCants, but they're all over Abunassar. "They don't ask about his game," he says. "They ask about his head. I tell them all he needs is the chance."

McCants knows it, too. Six months ago he scoffed at the idea of a 10-day contract. Four months ago the D-League was beneath him. But his extended unemployment has melted his stubbornness. In its place is a new financial reality. McCants lives comfortably but far from the lifestyle he once enjoyed. Aside from his rented pad, a Mercedes-Benz CL 63 AMG and Yukon Hybrid, he has few obligations. His house in Minnesota has been up for sale for over a year. "Tough market," he says with irony. Many of his perks have dried up. He bought the Nikes stacked in boxes around his apartment. He eats at Subway and Panda Express, or makes sandwiches on wheat bread. His only extravagances are those lime-green video game cases that litter his apartment. And acting classes. He sees himself on the silver screen one day. "It's about letting yourself go and becoming someone else entirely," he says.

Summer League
McCants is on the Cavs' summer-league roster. He's received two DNP-CDs in their two games so far, but says the coaches are going to be using him quite a bit from this point forward. -- Palmer

• Chat: Follow summer league, 4 ET

But he knows the NBA isn't waiting for him. He knows it's his move. "You know," McCants begins slowly, "if they want me to smile ... I'll do it." He sits back in his chair and promptly undermines the declaration he has just made. "But I won't ever change being me." That stubbornness led to a parting of the ways with his agent, so these days, McCants takes matters into his own hands. He calls GMs himself. He tells them he wants to look them in the eye. He knows he has to sell himself. He really does care about what people think. And instead of waiting for a camp invite, he's accepted an offer to play summer league with the Cavs -- for around $100 a day. At least it'll give him more time to prove his worth. "D-League, Europe, anything," says McHale. "He can't take any more time off; he has to play." Above all he has to change people's minds. "Make the changes you need to survive," McCants' father advises. "And if you have to, use some of your acting stuff."

Yeah, humility stings like a son of a bitch. There are no more calls from Lil Wayne or Jay-Z. Chris Paul is harder to reach, too. It's what happens when you're on the outside looking in.

McCants dreams of carving out a niche as a sixth man. It's a good living, he thinks, and he knows he's up to the task. "There isn't a 2-guard in the league who can guard me," he says. "Not one."

Back at the practice gym his high-arching rainbows drop through the net like an Olympic diver who barely disturbs the water. A few more, and McCants walks off the floor and takes a swig of mango-flavored Gatorade. "Another day, another dollar," he says.

If only that were true.
 
No wonder that big bitch KHLOE KARDASHIAN dumped him, and took up with LAMAR ODOM. She's a famefucker/starchaser by nature, and wanted a winner ... just like older sister KIM and her big ass when REGGIE was pounding her BUSH.

:puke::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
I just read earlier he couldnt even participate in the Cavs summer league cuz his mom is real sick

And I didnt read that article, my inner Colin took over
 
I was wondering why that ugly sister from the Kardashian's broke up with him. Makes sense.

I don't feel too bad for the nigga. He could play overseas and cake a milliona year atleast. I don't think he's being blackballed. He did nothing wrong to get blackballed. I Just don't think he's as nice as he thinks he is. He's got to come to grips with that and maybe getting a job in the league wouldn't be as difficult.
 
I was wondering why that ugly sister from the Kardashian's broke up with him. Makes sense.

I don't feel too bad for the nigga. He could play overseas and cake a milliona year atleast. I don't think he's being blackballed. He did nothing wrong to get blackballed. I Just don't think he's as nice as he thinks he is. He's got to come to grips with that and maybe getting a job in the league wouldn't be as difficult.

He aint as nice as he think he is but he is better than enough NBA players to where he whould have a job

JJ Barea has more job security than him
 
The problem sounds like the coach. If the coach has a problem with the star player, then the GM should have a problem with the coach. No wonder KG left.
 
No wonder that big bitch KHLOE KARDASHIAN dumped him, and took up with LAMAR ODOM. She's a famefucker/starchaser by nature, and wanted a winner ... just like older sister KIM and her big ass when REGGIE was pounding her BUSH.

:puke::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
nah, she deaded mccants b/c he was cheating on her or some shit. it was on an episode of her show.
 
He aint as nice as he think he is but he is better than enough NBA players to where he whould have a job

JJ Barea has more job security than him

Well i'm convinced JJ Barea has pictures of Mark Cuban doing some fucked up shit to animals. That's the only explanation I can think of for why he has a job not only on the Mavs but in the league.

McCants is good enough to have a job. I didn't know he was only 25. But he's not the only nigga in the league with a J and a quick first step. Dahntay Jones was in a similar position he was in. He started d'ing it up and became a defensive stopper. Gotta become some form of specialist and there's a million shooting specialists. The defensive specialists list is a lot shorter.
 
Yeah, he was on the roster, and everyone was wondering why he wasn't participating.

He should be in the league, with all these average ass players still getting a run.

I heard rumors about him at Carolina. If people keep saying you need to see a psychiatrist, maybe they're seeing something you're not and you might need to go.
 
McCants is good enough to have a job. I didn't know he was only 25. But he's not the only nigga in the league with a J and a quick first step. Dahntay Jones was in a similar position he was in. He started d'ing it up and became a defensive stopper. Gotta become some form of specialist and there's a million shooting specialists. The defensive specialists list is a lot shorter.

His offensive skills are a lot better than that dookie :smh:
 
wasnt going to read, but did.

damn, thats some shit right there. i was & still am to a degree

like how they were describing him. i came to the realization, that

you have to play the "game". fuck it, it may be fake(cant let 'em

sense that), but you gotta do what you need to in order to get to

where you need to go(without selling your soul). especially

dealing with caucasians who can control & dictate your career.

(cac's love to smile, & think something is wrong with you 'cause

you dont!!!)
 
Yeah, he was on the roster, and everyone was wondering why he wasn't participating.

He should be in the league, with all these average ass players still getting a run.

I heard rumors about him at Carolina. If people keep saying you need to see a psychiatrist, maybe they're seeing something you're not and you might need to go.

Gotta disagree. Just like dude said, just because he doesnt like to smile for the hell of it, make general convo and go out of his way to make someone else feel comfortable doesnt mean he has a problem. Im the same way. Ill talk if I have something to say, answer when spoken to, but all that cheesin in your face, talkin nonestop like im some preppy cheerleader aint happening. Its like if your not smiling, then your frowning. Shit aint alway that open and shut.
 
Gotta disagree. Just like dude said, just because he doesnt like to smile for the hell of it, make general convo and go out of his way to make someone else feel comfortable doesnt mean he has a problem. Im the same way. Ill talk if I have something to say, answer when spoken to, but all that cheesin in your face, talkin nonestop like im some preppy cheerleader aint happening. Its like if your not smiling, then your frowning. Shit aint alway that open and shut.

It's more than that. I know a lot of people who don't smile. That's the way he sees it, and he would be the last to know.

Go see a psychiatrist isn't some average every day shit you say to someone. It's something else going on.

Look at some of the comments from Kevin Love and the anonymous teammate. Maybe he's battling depression and doesn't know it. He went from captain to out of the league.
 
I hope he gets it together before his talent dries up. I wish he could go to Miami as part of their bench squad.
 
Well i'm convinced JJ Barea has pictures of Mark Cuban doing some fucked up shit to animals. That's the only explanation I can think of for why he has a job not only on the Mavs but in the league.

McCants is good enough to have a job. I didn't know he was only 25. But he's not the only nigga in the league with a J and a quick first step. Dahntay Jones was in a similar position he was in. He started d'ing it up and became a defensive stopper. Gotta become some form of specialist and there's a million shooting specialists. The defensive specialists list is a lot shorter.


dahntay jones never had nearly as much offensive game as mccants. not even close. mccants would be a good person to bring in off the bench for scoring.



Yeah, he was on the roster, and everyone was wondering why he wasn't participating.

He should be in the league, with all these average ass players still getting a run.

I heard rumors about him at Carolina. If people keep saying you need to see a psychiatrist, maybe they're seeing something you're not and you might need to go.

he should be in the league. you see how he was fine until whitman took over. i see that whitman didnt like him the players even said it. whitman is saying none of this stuff ever happened meanwhile players are remembering it distinctly. not just mccants but players that are still in the league and on the team. and i bet whitman made it his mission to make sure that he told everyone how bad mccants was just in case. whitman new he wasn't keeping his job but i wouldnt put it past him to spread the rumor that mccants is horrible

in the article he said he got tricked into seeing a shrink and within 10 minutes of the 1st session the shrink said theres nothing wrong with him. so he did go, there's nothing wrong other than he's a quiet guy who has a mean face.


wasnt going to read, but did.

damn, thats some shit right there. i was & still am to a degree

like how they were describing him. i came to the realization, that

you have to play the "game". fuck it, it may be fake(cant let 'em

sense that), but you gotta do what you need to in order to get to

where you need to go(without selling your soul). especially

dealing with caucasians who can control & dictate your career.

(cac's love to smile, & think something is wrong with you 'cause

you dont!!!)


this is the problem. he didnt walk in all happy and chipper smiling for no reason. he isn't tapdancing to play and fit in but that doesnt mean he's a problem. it just means he chill and regular. they didnt say he's out there screaming at players. theyre saying his body language makes it seem like he isnt interested. but they forget the fact that the play and the effort is what should count. if the guy isnt slapping teammates and calling them bitches whats the problem? if he's organizing outings and they like him whats the problem?



It's more than that. I know a lot of people who don't smile. That's the way he sees it, and he would be the last to know.

Go see a psychiatrist isn't some average every day shit you say to someone. It's something else going on.

Look at some of the comments from Kevin Love and the anonymous teammate. Maybe he's battling depression and doesn't know it. He went from captain to out of the league.

but that's just them being soft and bitchmade. if mccants isn't saying shit to them negative if he isnt excluding you from shit if he's just a regular quiet guy then whats the problem? why would the rest of his teammates like him? i mean brian cardinal is in the league? forreal? and mchale talking bout people coming to him asking if they did something wrong that's some more bitch shit. he looked at you wrong so you go to the gm and cry and inquire when mccants is in the same locker room with you? how bout saying "hey, you alright did i do something to you?" are people to shook to even do that. i guarantee if they ask he'd say nah that's just how i look theres no problem we're good. and they'd know firsthand that nothings wrong.

lotta bitchmade men in the league, he looked at me wrong so ima go ahead and go to the gm and ask if i did something, which makes the other player look bad and gives him the horrible rep..all because you're too shook to approach him as a man.

so basically
smile and dance
and cheer
otherwise you're not interested in playing in the league and you're too much of a headache to deal with...
 
One final ray of hope quickly vanished. McCants worked out for the Mavericks, and afterward coach Rick Carlisle asked him to see a psychiatrist. "To find out what was wrong with me," McCants says sarcastically.

there you go. bottom line a smart mouth can talk a person out of a LOT of good shit.
 
dahntay jones never had nearly as much offensive game as mccants. not even close. mccants would be a good person to bring in off the bench for scoring.

Never said he did. I'm saying you gotta do something the next man doesn't do to stay in this league. Dahntay Jones wasn't ever known as a defensive stopper when the Grizz drafted him. Then last season with the Nuggets he focused on it and somehow got the Pacers to bite on some bogus ass deal. He needs to focus on that defense and get on a roster. He has the athleticism and to him he has the best 1st step in the league. HE has the gifts to be a defender. Otherwise, he's going to continue looking for work because he's not the only nigga in the league with a J And a quick first step.
 
so basically
smile and dance
and cheer
otherwise you're not interested in playing in the league and you're too much of a headache to deal with...

Right. Ive been called into the bosses office on atleast 3 occasions behind this shit. Just cause I dont talk you and make nice doesnt mean I hate you. Just dont like small talk. To me its phoney, so I dont like to partake in it. Although it is funny when a chick just comes up to and comments on why youre not smiling... "gotcha bitch!!!":lol:
 
Imma bonafide UNC fan since 1988 when I started watching college b-ball, and I've seen practically every game he's played his freshman thru his junior year. The dude is just plain CRAZY. Similar to TO or Ron Artest. There are things going on in his head that are not going on in real life. This has nothing to do with playing basketball though. He has never been a cancer on any team. People fear what they dont understand. He needs a therapist, but that has no effect on the court. He has exceptional basketball skills. He is not just a shooter. He works hard defensively also. He comes to practice and works hard because he actually like playing basketball. The powers that be just want a reason to get rid of him just because they don't understand him. The most interesting thing he said was, "I'm out of the league because of some facial expressions." There are people who in the league who have done far worst. Remember that guy that played an entire season accused of raping a little white girl. That guy missed a number of practices and team meeting, and his job was never in question.:hmm:
 
First of all, niggas need to stop throwing some race shit in there. I am tired of these bgol militants quick to talk about "cacs" cause they get fucked over at work. probably quiet as a church mouse with their boss...that being said I was listening to Jamie Foxx show and Master P was talking about how he was working with dude. Unfortunately, in the NBA there are a lot of personalities and other players who are used t phony people smiling in their face probably weren't able to take someone who really wasn't about to front in their faces for no good reason. However, his body language must have been terrible and he had to have been missing a lot of cues on just being personable. It's been too many people who have asked him to see a shrink and the shrinks were looking for a diagnosis but not helping him with just dealing with people in general and that seems what his problem might be. Hell Cleveland might as well sign him up.
 
It's more than that. I know a lot of people who don't smile. That's the way he sees it, and he would be the last to know.

Go see a psychiatrist isn't some average every day shit you say to someone. It's something else going on.

Look at some of the comments from Kevin Love and the anonymous teammate. Maybe he's battling depression and doesn't know it. He went from captain to out of the league.

Yes it is, especially in this society.

Tough reading that article, especially when there's guys like Tim Duncan in the league who is known for being "one-note." At the same time, McCants isn't as good a player as Duncan.

At the same time, if you're in the public eye like that, sometimes you have to play the role. I'm pretty sure he could have done it if he wanted to, especially considering he was taking acting classes.

Still fucked up regardless.
 
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