knicks1248 wrote:we have a guy on this roster with the 2nd worst contract in franchise history (houstons is #1) yet he seems to be a side convo.so we need to get rid of 30+ yr old melo who avg 22pg 7 brds, 3 asst, 70+ games and a allstar nod, as oppose to noah, who played in 40 something games avg less than 9 points, 7 brds and 3 asst.
In an ideal sense, men understand the concept of LOYALTY
Back when guys were in a tribe. With spears and shields, it mattered that when things got bad, when the enemy attacked, that the guy to your left and right were your brothers. That they'd fight with you to the end. That you could trust them to stand with you and fight and never give up.
The basis of this loyalty is why men have built incredible things on this planet. Think about it. Railroads. Airplanes. Going out into space. Skyscrapers. Computers. All built by men and usually by groups of men committed to a shared vision, sacrificing for the greater good, sacrificing for each other.
When two men have a conflict, they often weigh out an entire history together. Was this person loyal to me? Did they stand by me when I had nothing? Did they try to lift me up when I was down? Often, it all matters.
When a man and a woman have a conflict. The woman will weigh out the last day or so. That's it. But from a survival standpoint, it makes total sense. In previous times, dudes died off fast and hard and women needed to jump from provider/protector to the next one, or her children would die. Women operate based off of - What have you done from me lately? What's in it for me?
Noah is aging and injured. He gives all he has, he can't give anymore than that. If he could, he would. In a group of men, they see his effort, they see his passion, they see his desire to fight and lead. Sure, he's overpaid and he's a bad contract. But he's LOYAL to the group concept and dynamic. Other can trust him.
Melo just doesn't care. He doesn't give all that he has, he could give more than that. If he could, he might, but he probably won't. Everyone else sees his lack of effort, his lack of passion, his lack of desire and leadership. Sure he's overpaid and a bad contract, but what matters is he's DISLOYAL to the group concept and dynamic. If you want to count on him, you can't. You can't trust him to do what's right for everyone.
In any GROUP OF MEN, the biggest sin is to LET YOUR BROTHERS DOWN WHEN THEY NEEDED YOU THE MOST.
You let them down when you could have done more, you could have given a little more, but you chose not to do it. You don't let them down when you give it all you have, and you simply have no more to give. There is a difference. It's a HUGE DIFFERENCE.
"Being perfect is not that scoreboard out there, it's not about winning. It's about your relationship to yourself, your family and your team mates. Being perfect means you told them the truth. That truth is you did everything you could, there isn't one more thing you could have done. Can you live in that moment, with clear eyes, and love in your heart? With joy in your heart? If you can do that, YOU'RE PERFECT" - Gary Gaines, Friday Night Lights
Melo acts like a disloyal woman. What's in it for me? What are you doing for me? What about the attention and validation I want?
You want respect like man, then don't act like a woman. Don't make it all about you all the time.
If you want respect in a group of men, committed to a goal and vision, then be LOYAL to the greater good for the group. You are citing Melo's and Noah's individual stats. That doesn't measure leadership, it doesn't measure loyalty. It doesn't measure character and heart. Can Melo walk in front of his team mates and feel he told them the truth? That he did everything he could, that there was not one more thing he could have done? No wonder Linsanity drove him insane. Here's some undrafted rookie player, with 1/1000th of the talent, who took the ENTIRE WORLD BY STORM. Who got the attention Melo wanted, and lead the team to wins and acted with poise and without fear. Embracing the team concept and the greater good of what team work is supposed to mean. The problem was not that Melo was jealous, it's that he was ashamed. It's not about the points, the stats, the awards, it's about whether your brothers can count on you when they need you the most.
Noah is a toxic contract, he's not a toxic person.
Melo is a toxic contract and a toxic person.
If you can't see the difference because you are looking at some box scores, then I just plain feel sorry for you. And if ANYONE here wants to look at a box score and think that means more when in a group of men than loyalty and being reliable, then I just plain feel sorry for your kids. Because those kids aren't being taught what it fundamentally means to be a man.