Two years ago during the Thunder-Laker playoff series, I got to chat with Ron Artest (this was before the name change). Just the two of us. I wrote about Artestâs efforts to change his bad-boy image. You can read that column here.
Artest, now Metta World Peace, laid those efforts in ruin Sunday in Los Angeles, where his vicious elbow, not in the flow of play, sent the Thunderâs James Harden to the floor with a concussion. Hardenâs status remains unknown, and really, so does Metta World Chaosâ.
A player with a rap sheet like Chaosâ will draw a hefty penalty from NBA commissioner David Stern. Some say five games, some say 10, some say more. But Stern has a problem. Whatever penalty he selects, he knows itâs fully punitive. Knows the penaltyâs full effects will be the harm it does to the Lakers and to Chaos personally. None of the penalty will be rehabilitative.
Chaos has shown himself to be unchangeable. His repeated outbursts, notably the brawl in Auburn Hills, Mich., that gave the NBA perhaps its worst black eye ever, have reached the point where we now know for certain that Chaos will erupt. Kobe Bryant can call him âsweet.â I can spend five minutes with him and declare that the leagueâs bad boy has mellowed in his old age. But now we know that the Artest formerly known as Ron will explode. The only variable is time.
Which is why Stern faces a dilemma. Punishment wonât serve as a deterrent. Artest once was suspended for 73 games, yet  his ways havenât changed. Just as imprisonment hasnât scared off some criminals from committing crimes, suspensions have no effect on Chaos.
How should I say this? Metta World Chaos is a kook. Not a kook in the way your brother-in-law is a kook. A kook in the clinical sense. Thereâs a wiring issue. Chaos is a stranger in a stranger land. He doesnât fit, even in the surreal culture of the NBA. How is Stern to discipline someone who really doesnât respond to discipline? The only answer is banishment. And Stern doesnât want to banish Chaos. I donât want Stern to banish Chaos. Heck, James Harden doesnât Stern to banish Chaos. The NBA is a more interesting place with Chaos.
Of course, a stiff suspension could be a deterrent to other NBA players. Just because Chaos doesnât get it doesnât mean right-thinking players wouldnât give pause. The NBA is dealing with a couple of hot-button issues â" the concussion frenzy that envelopes all sports, plus the flagrant fouls, which seem to be accelerating.
So Stern could use the mugging of Harden to spread the word that he is intent on keeping the NBAâs streets safe. Just as long as he knows the penalty will have little bearing on Metta World Chaos himself.
-------------Berry Tramel can be heard Monday through Friday from 4:40-5:20 p.m. on The Sports Animal radio network, including AM-640 and FM-98.1. You can e-mail him here and follow him on Twitter @BerryTramel. Visit Berry's website here.If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.
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