Wednesday, December 8, 2010

On Taking Ron Artest Seriously

               As Ron Artest celebrated his first NBA title last June, he gave a special shout-out to his therapist. Everyone thought it was funny, and apt -- Artest is a crazy dude, of course he has a shrink! It was, to say the least, an unconventional acknowledgment. And given the strange, quixotic interviews Ron Ron gave that night, it felt about par for the course.

               Artest may no longer have been the player he once was. But that night made it OK, finally, to open ourselves to one of the NBA's few true originals. They just don't make them like Artest anymore, and when they do (Gilbert Arenas, anyone?) the story often ends badly. Lucky for Artest, he got that part out of the way.


               But if the Lakers forward started this season as a national treasure, he was still something of a joke. When he was at his most dangerous, literally and figuratively, even Artest's most pointed critics would admit he was the game's mightiest on-ball defender. They took him seriously. The fear of Artest, too, was a kind of compliment. He was a crisis point for the NBA exactly because he was so damn good. He became a winner with the Lakers, and a beloved one (despite being with the Lakers), and yet was denied any ballast. "Artest being Artest" brought us non-stop amusement, where before, it had been the source of the best kind of controversy.

               Except, in an unlikely way, late-period Artest has started to matter again -- and you can thank his therapist for it. Pretty much everything Artest said that night was from the heart; the mention of his therapist, though, seemed the most tangential. As it turns out, it was possibly the most important thing he said, and absolutely key to the way he saw himself. Want proof? This season, Artest has made mental health advocacy his new m.o. as a public figure: raffling off a championship ring to raise money, recording a PSA, and now, according to NBA.com, possibly donating his entire 2011-12 salary away to charity.

From Scott Howard-Cooper at the Hang Time blog:
[Ron Artest] is seriously thinking about handing over at least half, and maybe all, of next season's $6.79 million salary. "I'm definitely considering the whole thing," Artest said. "Or maybe 60 percent."

Although he may not finalize details until the summer, he called the plan "very serious. I've talked to my wife about it already. It's a powerful message. The message is about the inspiration. That's what I want, to inspire people. People will be like, 'Wow. Why is he doing this? Oh, that's why. Wow. We need to help educate.' I didn't come [to the Lakers] for the money. Obviously I could have gone somewhere else, even a lesser market. Pay less taxes. The taxes here are freaking killing me, you know what I'm saying?"
It wouldn't be Ron Artest without that last, distracting, maybe even self-defeating, mention of taxes and the angst they cause him as a multi-millionaire.

               This isn't the first time Artest has thought of giving his salary away, which might come as a huge surprise if we were talking about any other player. In 2006-07, which feels like light years ago in Artest's story, he considered giving that year's paychecks to "to college and high school scholarships." The difference is, this time it's personal. Arenas and former Arizona teammate Richard Jefferson once had a competition to see who could give the most lavish gift to their school. Jefferson, who gave the money to build a practice facility, won. It was funny -- a novel way for players to go about helping out their alma mater, and the latest "what can't Arenas make weird?" episode. Artest's earlier plan, while I don't doubt that it was sincere, seemed to tell us as much about his erratic behavior as what he really felt was important.

               Ron Artest has had, to say the least, an eventful career. Through it all, he's been one of the most talked-about figures in the NBA -- usually for all the wrong reasons, or reasons that sought to make light of him as a person. That's all changing. Through it all, though, he is still undeniably Ron Ron. These days, "Artest being Artest" isn't scary, or laughable -- it's the new benchmark for authenticity in a league that's often sorely lacking in that department.



In Progress: Golden State Warriors @ San Antonio Spurs

                The red-hot San Antonio Spurs resume a lengthy six-game homestand tonight in search of their 25th straight home win over the Golden State Warriors.

                The Spurs, who have topped the Warriors nine straight times overall, are also on the cusp of the best start in franchise history. A win tonight would make San Antonio 18-3, surpassing the 2007-08 club that also started the season at 17-3.



                Most recently the Spurs improved to 2-0 on their current residency Sunday when Tony Parker registered 19 points and six assists in a well-balanced San Antonio attack that trounced New Orleans, 109-84.Matt Bonner went 4-of-5 from the three-point arc and finished with 14 points for San Antonio, which has won four of its past five overall.

                Richard Jefferson had 13 points, while Tim Duncan, George Hill and Gary Neal all recorded 11 points in the victory. Duncan also chipped in nine rebounds."I thought that our team defense was very good from the beginning to the end of the game," said Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich. "It's one of the few games this year we've had really consistent defense for the whole 48 minutes."

                The Warriors, meanwhile, continued to struggle last night by dropping the second of a very difficult three-game road trip in Dallas. Dirk Nowitzki scored a game-high 25 points in that one, as the Mavericks held off Golden State down the stretch to notch a 105-100 win, their 10th straight victory.Stephen Curry had 21 points to lead the Warriors, who have lost four straight and nine of 10 games. David Lee posted 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in defeat.

                "We're not getting the final results as far as the wins we need, but we are playing there," said Warriors head coach Keith Smart. "So by the time we get it all together, I think we're going to be a good basketball team."Monta Ellis finished with 18 points, while Dorrell Wright had 17 points and 11 rebounds for Golden State, which fell to 3-9 on the road.

                The Spurs 24-game run against Golden State in the Alamo City, which began in Duncan's rookie season of 1997-98, is the NBA's longest active home winning streak against a single opponent.