NBA loyalty? What a joke

By Jett Hatton / Roar Pro

Loyalty is something that is so highly expected of the greatest players in the game, but when a player leaves he is labelled un-loyal and is criticised to such a large extent for doing what they believe is best for themselves.

But when a franchise trades a player with an immense love for a city, the excuse of “it’s just a business” is so often brought up. It’s completely unfair for players such as Kevin Durant and LeBron James to get so heavily scrutinised for leaving to pursue a better situation for themselves.

And somehow, the team is left to feel so betrayed and hurt but can just brush off trading a player with them having no say in the matter.

Three trades in recent times highlight the cold-heartedness an NBA front office can show towards a franchise player, completely taking loyalty out of the picture.

The trades being Isaiah Thomas to the Cavs, Blake Griffin to the Pistons and Demar DeRozan to the Spurs.

All of these players had the chance to leave in free agency or force a trade out of there, but all they showed the city was love and hard work. When players leave they are perceived as the villain and when being criticised, leaving for the better of themselves and career is rarely accounted for.

But when the front office pulls the trigger it’s apparently okay to fall back on the “it’s just a business excuse”.

And yes the league is a business but in a place where loyalty is so highly expected of the star players, you’d think the front office would show the same loyalty and respect to an individual who has given their blood, sweat and tears to the city. Some players even go as far as putting the team before themselves, playing in a time of personal struggles and difficulties.

The biggest example of this is former Celtics guard and franchise player, Isaiah Thomas who we all know played in Game 1 of the playoffs in 2017 hours after his sister tragically passed away. He gave his whole heart to the franchise and was ready to commit to the Celtics for the rest of his career, but was traded away to Cleveland months later to a situation that has now completely screwed his career over.

(Image: Keith Allison CC BY-SA 2.0)

The next example is Blake Griffin getting shipped off to the Pistons. Blake had every opportunity to leave the joke of a franchise that is the Clippers organisation, but instead gave his loyalty to be a “Clipper for life” and then was traded away months after signing a five-year extension.

Now the most recent blockbuster trade in NBA news is probably the most disrespectful in recent memory. With the Raptors trading the best player in franchise history, who had delivered so much to the country of Canada days after telling him he was not going to be shipped out.

If Demar had left Toronto last summer to go home to LA or elsewhere, his jersey would have been burnt and name disrespected.

But instead, the franchise did what they thought was best, not even considering the welfare of a Demar who had previously led the Raptors to the most amount of wins in franchise history, not to mention finishing eight in MVP voting. Combined with recently admitting to dealing with depression and the front office didn’t even have any intention to tell him beforehand?

And to tell him the complete opposite? I know that a team should try and make themselves better but surely, they owed Demar more than that.

The outcome and manner of these trades will shift the way players approach their upcoming free agency. Kevin Durant did what was best for him, so after these examples of the myth surrounding franchise loyalty it should be about time for other great players to do the same.

Because NBA loyalty is a complete joke.

The Crowd Says:

2018-07-25T21:10:06+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Agree but then teams and fans can't complain about player loyalty, and unfortuantely they do. On Thomas - I think the salary was agreed with the Suns. I don't beleive the Celtics ever awarded him a contract.

AUTHOR

2018-07-23T00:12:15+00:00

Jett Hatton

Roar Pro


They get paid for it but it still would sting getting traded, especially when you've given so much to a city. It's like you're at a job that you really like, you're comfortable and you're good mates with everyone there and you have built a whole bunch of achievements there. But then you get told you have to move to work at a different place, because they want someone else. Yeah you are making the same amount of money but you have to leave everyhting behind and move. Basketball is their job and they get paid a lot but it still hurts when you get moved around.

2018-07-22T23:51:24+00:00

astro

Guest


Oh please...Being traded is a reality for every player in the NBA. So is being paid millions of dollars to put a ball through a hoop. The Raptors "not even considering the welfare of a Demar"...poor DeMar. Maybe the $140mil contract they signed him to, might make him feel better. Blake "gave his loyalty" to the Clips...and in return, they gave him $170mil - he'll bring home $39mil in 2021/22. As for Thomas, no doubt he was brilliant for the Celtics and player through major adversity, but he's to blame for his situation, not the Celtics. In fact, the Celtics were the team who gave him a chance to shine in the first place. Thomas was a bench player before the Celtics. He had trouble at Sac and the Suns with teammates and coaches. Who's fault was that? The teams? Did they drive his market value down? The Celtics traded for him, built an offense around him and helped him become and All-Star. All while paying him more than he'd ever been paid before. His salary went from $850K to $7mil with Boston. So, how did they do Thomas wrong, exactly? When he was traded to the Cavs to play alongside one of the best players of all time and earn himself an even better contract, he went back to complaining and again, drove his own market value down. And despite all this, he's still been paid between $6-7mil for the past 4yrs.

2018-07-22T11:17:10+00:00

Brendon

Guest


The Blake Griffin trade I don't think was that bad. The Isaiah Thomas to Cleveland was tough but he didn't do himself any favours while in Cleveland or LA. The DeRozan trade is ridiculous. The raptors already have trouble getting big name players to stay or acquire them in free agency. Big teams like Celtics can do nasty trades but Toronto can't. The Raptors are definitely not the Celtics. This will hurt them in the long term. Reputation in the business world matters, especially if you're an ambitous small company looking to the compete with the big companies.

Read more at The Roar