Lynn Green is a loyal reader and an English instructor at Centennial High School. Iâm a little partial to English teachers, considering I was an English major back in the day. English and history double major. I liked history more than English, but I found myself drawn more to my English instructors. The best teacher I ever had, Dennis Miller, came not in college, but at Norman High School. I even signed up for a poetry class he taught, and Iâm not so crazy about poetry.
Anyway, Lynn Green asked a great question this morning. âBaseballâs off-season is called the âHot Stove League.â What is the NBA equivalent? Lawn Chair League? Pool Side League? A/C League?â
âWhat a swell question. The Hot Stove League has lived for a century in baseball lore. Baseball fans would get their baseball fix during a long, cold winter by talking about their teams and what trades could be made to improve. The image was that men would sit around and be kept warm by a hot stove and baseball talk.
The truth is, Hot Stove League moves werenât all that numerous. Youâd get a good Rogers Hornsby trade ever now and then, because apparently the guy was a jack-ass that franchises didnât care if he was the greatest second baseman of all time and would just trade him. Youâd get the Yankees adding a piece like Johnny Mize or Enos Slaughter. Youâd get a manager fired or hired.
But the Hot Stove League was mostly about what could happen.
Fast forward 60, 70, 80 years to the NBA, and thereâs plenty of talk about what could or should happen. But thereâs also tons of talk about what has happened. Baseballâs Reserve Clause is dead. No player has to stick with a team for a big chunk of his career, if he doesnât want to. Player movement is rampant. Rosters shuffle incessantly.
Perhaps it makes it tough for fans to follow. But for fans who want to follow, it makes for a great Hot Stove League equivalent. Where will Dwight Howard go? Where will Steve Nash go, and now that heâs a Laker, what does it mean? Will the Rockets and Mavs have enough players to fill out a roster? Will Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov have to raid St. Basilâs Cathedral to pay the luxury tax headed the way of his  Brooklyn Netropolitans?
It makes for great chatter among NBA fans, and it needs a name.
Lynn suggested Pool Side League, A/C league, Lawn Chair League.
How about Firecracker League? Most of the NBA movement revolves around the week before and the week after Independence Day (some symbolism there, Iâd say). Youâve got the draft in late June, then the negotiating period starting on July 1, then the signing date, which this season starts July 11.
I like it. The Firecracker League. Who won the Firecracker League? (Lakers, Nets, etc.). Who lost the Firecracker League (Dallas, Houston). Who sat by and just watched the fireworks (Thunder, Spurs, etc.).
Weâll keep talking about the Firecracker League for several days, then weâll update who won. But I like the sound of it. Firecracker League. Thanks, Lynn.
-------------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.
No comments:
Post a Comment