Can't Judge Basketball Fights
by Hockey Fights
Often after an all-out basketball brawl, sports commentators
and radio call in listeners usually condemn the mayhem in a disgust that is
universal. On the other hand, baseball fights elicit pride and have been later
cited as the moment a team came together in a championship season. (see 2004 Red
Sox-Yankees/Varitek-ARod…We don’t throw at .260 hitters). The next thing that
comes is the accusation that critics are viewing the incidents through the
prism of race – thus the difference reactions.
So I’m going to attempt to explain.
I think the basketball fight does look scarier. It's possible that my perception is skewed by race, and I’m probably not alone on either count. But
there are factors to consider when interpreting the biased reaction.
One is the typical that these NBA guys are all street thugs
who would be doing this on a daily basis if basketball was not a profession. Those
people can suck it.
For others, you just can’t get around the fact that we are
all human, and gut level emotion is hard to judge – especially if you try to bring
rationality to an irrational emotion.
That said, I still think there are explanations that
separate out the racial part. So let’s compare across the spectrum of
professional sports.
First you can’t compare hockey and football to make the case
against basketball. Aside from the fact that hockey fights are institutional
and long accepted, the fisticuffs are inherently contained and follow a
standard script.
How significant a fight can you have on a surface of ice? Either way, the gloves go off - and sooner or
later - one guy is on the ice, and that’s it. The referees wrestle them away
from each other, and everyone settles back in.
Of course, the third man in rule has thoroughly contained
the worst offenses of the past.
Football also has constraints. How much of fight can you
really have wearing all that equipment? Even so, I have never seen an all-out
football brawl, which is striking.
Could it be that the game already is so violent that a fight
just seems too much to bear? Could it have something to do with the short
playing career and lack of guaranteed contracts? I’m sure it’s never far from
their minds.
So the real comparison is with baseball. Baseball fights usually occur with one player
chasing down another. Batter charges the mound, throws a punch and both end up
on the ground. 45 players then converge and tends to clutter in a pile on the
ground.
Very predictable, which NBA fights seem not to be. There’s usually no mad dash involved in
basketball. Both players are tangled up already, and there’s less momentum for
them to end up on the ground. As a result, they’re more prevalent to go toe to
toe, and have the entanglement turn into a shoving fest that has a mind of its
own.
At the same time, fewer players involved seems to allow the
fallen to actually get up and keep the fight in motion. However, baseball
fights still do have the possibility of traveling, but a significant distinction
does exist that causes separation.
I’ll liken it to the manner in which movies escalate the
drama by putting the plot on the clock. The bad guys have just taken the huge diamond
that Indian Jones would love for the museum, and we’re certainly responsive to
the chase. But the race to secure the antidote he just swallowed adds the
element of time to the excitement.
In basketball’s case, a lack containment is what hangs over
the main drama. In other words, there’s no partition to separate the melee from
the fans. So as the focal point moves chaotically the uncertainty suddenly
involves real people, and sitting at home, it’s not hard to see yourself in
those seats.
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