Shaq's got a Lot of People Fooled! Won't mean Shit to the Celtics Title Hopes!!!

TJervey

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Good Read here. Shaq's ass hasn't been a true contributor in years, yet, he's done a good Job of deflecting the attention away from the fact that he is more of a liability than an asset these days. Short of like Tyson when he got out of jail, and the first few years, Fools were buying his PPV and tickets to his fights, expecting the old Mike!?!?!? I remember the excitement when the Celtics signed Shaq, like they'd just pulled a winner and signed Shaq circa the Laker Years?!?!?! His ass ain't been shit since then, hell... DWade carried his big ass over the finish line to the chip in Miami.... Wait and see, he ain't shit no more.. :smh:


Too lovable to hate? Shaq's persona masks lagging career

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/michael_rosenberg/10/11/shaq.celtics/index.html

Shaquille O'Neal is funny. This is the simplest observation about the man, but it is also the first thing to remember about him and the last thing you should forget. It is, I think, at the heart of why Shaq has crafted a public persona unlike any in this era of American professional sports.
Shaq is in Boston now, hoping to be the final piece that brings the Celtics a championship. Last year, he was supposed to be the Cavs' final piece. Before that, Phoenix's final piece. It hasn't worked yet. Shaq is not the first-generation athletic-freak Shaq, or even the second-generation still-dominant Shaq, and he might not even be the third-generation flashes-now-and-again Shaq.
But he is still Shaq, and so I suspect most people are pulling for him. He is the kind of guy you pull for, sometimes despite your better instincts, because ... well, as he says on his Twitter page: "VERY QUOTATIOUS, I PERFORM RANDOM ACTS OF SHAQNESS."
There are so many conventional reasons that the public should ridicule Shaq. For years, he saw the regular season as a time to get in shape. The most successful coach ever, Phil Jackson, said he never really wanted to work. Shaq feuded with his most talented teammate (Kobe Bryant) and rarely gives credit to any other center. He mocked David Robinson and Alonzo Mourning and other All-Stars. He trashed his first four teams after he left.
And yet ... this is weird, but it somehow has all made Shaq more likable, because it's all a game to him. Wilt Chamberlain famously said that nobody roots for Goliath; maybe Shaq's greatest feat is that, despite being the most talented big man in NBA history, he was never really Goliath.
"I don't let earthlings motivate me," he once said, and again: Shaquille O'Neal is funny. And, for that reason, like Charles Barkley, he gets a pass for almost anything he says because people like him.
Really, I think that's it. I don't mean to simplify too much, but this is a purposefully simple man. He just wants to have fun. His feud with Kobe boiled down to simple philosophical differences: Kobe took everything too seriously, and Shaq did not take things seriously enough. Kobe showed up at training camp in late September determined to show everybody he was the best player of all time. Shaq showed up fat, out of shape and, one year, needing surgery he had put off so he could enjoy his summer.
The American sports fan ethos should have tilted public opinion toward Kobe. But most people sided with Shaq. He had the benefit of timing: Shaq was a full-blown superstar when the Lakers started winning championships, while Kobe was still rising. But also, Shaq seemed like more fun to hang around. Kobe is a born assassin. Shaq is an aspiring cartoon character, complete with the Superman "S" tattoo and nicknames like "The Big Shamrock." Early in his career, he said he had different smiles depending on how much he was getting paid to endorse a product.
So the world wonders why anybody would sign loafer Manny Ramirez, why the Vikings would want selfish, grumpy Randy Moss. Meanwhile Shaq -- who shares some of their least attractive qualities -- goes to the Celtics, and people want it to work. LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh all signed with the Heat this summer to make it easier to win a championship. Shaq once left a contending team in Orlando for a rebuilding one in L.A. because he wanted a lifestyle change. He wanted to live among the stars. This never meant too much to him, and if that cost him a championship or two (and a half-dozen MVP awards) ... well, that's the price you pay for being loved by earthlings.
 
Good Read here. Shaq's ass hasn't been a true contributor in years, yet, he's done a good Job of deflecting the attention away from the fact that he is more of a liability than an asset these days.

really?

when you (and the SI author) compose such statements, do you recall that you are referring to a 38 year old man playing professional basketball?

:smh:
 
really?

when you (and the SI author) compose such statements, do you recall that you are referring to a 38 year old man playing professional basketball?

:smh:

Absolutely... I am talking about how the reality of what it means to sign him differs from the overall public perception of such a signing! His bigger than life personality outshines the fact that for the most part it is a liability for a team to sign him, primarily due to his overblown sense of self worth, and the illusion that has been created that he is an asset, therefore taking away from minutes which could be used to develop young talent, as well as affecting team chemistry in the event that he gets/ or should I say will get hurt... So, to answer your question, I do understand what is being written about...
 
Finally. The way many in the boxing media act like Manny Pacquiao is perfect, the mainstream sports media has been sucking off Shaq for years and years and letting him pass on his attention-whoring and near constant cheapshots at opposing players, former coaches, and even current teammates.
Teams and the media acting like his signing is a big deal amaze me. When was the last time he was a major contributor?
 
. DWade carried his big ass over the finish line to the chip in Miami.... Wait and see, he ain't shit no more.. :smh:

.

This may be the biggest misconception in about that Miami team. The Heat would not have even gotten past Detroit that year if Shaq hadnt dominated the paint. Wade was not the key figure in that series..it was Shaq..he killed us. If not for Shaq, Wade would not have even gotten a chance to have that monster Finals.

He is definitely way out of his prime NOW...but he was still the key to that Miami team getting to the finals.

In terms of the attention-whoring...that is another story.... I hate the way he goes in on former teammates....not a good look.
 
This may be the biggest misconception in about that Miami team. The Heat would not have even gotten past Detroit that year if Shaq hadnt dominated the paint. Wade was not the key figure in that series..it was Shaq..he killed us. If not for Shaq, Wade would not have even gotten a chance to have that monster Finals.
He is definitely way out of his prime NOW...but he was still the key to that Miami team getting to the finals.

In terms of the attention-whoring...that is another story.... I hate the way he goes in on former teammates....not a good look.

I agree with that but give a lot of love to Alonzo Mourning for provide the interior defense Shaq couldn't for the Heat that year.
 
No doubt good points about shaq in miami but his contributions were still a bit one dimensional. Were they worth 15-20 mil? At this point he is stealing a check and he has gotten a lot of free passes for going to teams, failing to deliver and then blaming former teammates and coaches for his failures... real bitchass moves... :smh:
 
No doubt good points about shaq in miami but his contributions were still a bit one dimensional. Were they worth 15-20 mil? At this point he is stealing a check and he has gotten a lot of free passes for going to teams, failing to deliver and then blaming former teammates and coaches for his failures... real bitchass moves... :smh:

No doubt. This is what happens when sports reporters spend more energy being fans instead of journalists. I'm still shocked that the Celtics, who need to get younger, would get Shaq. How does that help them? He still plays lackadaisical defense, he's still horrible on pick and rolls, he can't get up and down the floor like he used to. What does he add they couldn't have gotten somewhere else for the same or less money.
 
No doubt. This is what happens when sports reporters spend more energy being fans instead of journalists. I'm still shocked that the Celtics, who need to get younger, would get Shaq. How does that help them? He still plays lackadaisical defense, he's still horrible on pick and rolls, he can't get up and down the floor like he used to. What does he add they couldn't have gotten somewhere else for the same or less money.

No doubt and I believe this signing is going to come back to haunt them because they are going to feel obligated to give him minutes and that is going to screw their chemistry up because he will not accept a decoy role and he is so unreliable at this point in his career. His desire to catch Kobe is so transparent. Any contender that signs him is definitely purchasing fools gold... :smh:
 
No doubt and I believe this signing is going to come back to haunt them because they are going to feel obligated to give him minutes and that is going to screw their chemistry up because he will not accept a decoy role and he is so unreliable at this point in his career. His desire to catch Kobe is so transparent. Any contender that signs him is definitely purchasing fools gold... :smh:

It's one thing when the sports media falls for the okey-doke, they're more fans than journalists anyway but for experienced guys like Danny Ainge to fall for it AFTER watching this idea flop in Phoenix for Steve Kerr and in Cleveland for Danny Ferry (was it a Ferry hire?) shocks me.
 
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