I thought it was a strange piece.
The LeBron stuff. In his columns, yeah, he went after him pretty hard. Which is okay. That is allowed. As much criticism as LeBron gets, there are also many people who pounce on anyone who rips him. Appreciate him! Best player in the game! He's done things that deserve to be ripped (he has been too passive at times; his free agency was weird; he did disappear against Boston). What the piece doesn't mention is, from 2012-2014, when LeBron took his game to an even higher level, Wojnarowski has written more fawning pieces on him than just about anyone. Almost as if you can write different things based on different performances. Lakers fans actually have these same beefs with Woj about Kobe. He ripped him at times post-Shaq, and then when the Lakers were winning titles again, wrote columns praising him (which he still does). It'd be like getting mad at someone for ripping Magic after the 1984 Finals and then praising him for his effort in the 1987 Finals.
I also got a kick out of Craggs, of course, being quoted for ripping Woj for ripping LeBron. When Kobe scored 81, Slate--#slatepitches--wrote a piece criticizing him. Because he didn't pass the ball enough. While rallying his team from nearly 20 points down. And scoring the second-most points in NBA history. The byline on the story, which could have been ghostwritten by Smush Parker? Tommy Craggs. It was a piece Deadspin would usually mock.
He maybe didn't rip Dumars enough. Okay.
He gets things wrong sometimes. Like, Ric Bucher, quoted in the piece on the record at least, saying that Kobe would never, ever, ever wear a Lakers uniform again? That was seven years ago.
He ripped Hollinger. I know it's a sin in the analytics community to do that because he's proof that PER rules and he built the Grizzlies, but...he had nothing to do with bringing in the three pieces that have carried the Grizzlies these past years: Gasol, Randolph, and Conley. That was the old GM who didn't know anything. And for a franchise that's been as solid on the court as they've been, it has been a bit chaotic off. Getting rid of Hollins. And then nearly losing Joerger after one season. Is it out of line to criticize some of the new people in the front office who contributed to that uncertainty on the bench?
He now has more sources than he did when he first started at Yahoo. That's bad. Bad Woj.
The Dumars fine: If true, are we supposed to be upset at that? Woj convinced a source to leak him things. Gawker has built an entire offshoot website based just on the Sony leaks, they're loving them so much. But Wojnarowski getting a few memos is...bad? (not to mention the image of the NBA bigwigs altering memos to catch a leaker is funny. "No, no, in that one say that we honor the accomplishments of Earvin Johnson, but leave the Magic part out.").
Aside from LeBron--who can't be criticized--a few of his other targets include "the New York Knicks management, the “Carolina way,” John Calipari, Larry Brown, college basketball coaches, former player’s union executive director Billy Hunter, agent David Falk, and Boston Celtics executive Danny Ainge."
God forbid anyone target those concepts or people. Seriously? Is he not supposed to target Knicks management, Larry Brown's travels and rivalries, power-hungry college coaches, and Billy frickin' Hunter? Huh?
And this:
But that’s precisely the problem. Wojnarowski’s reporting is rife with opinion, conjecture, and speculation—whether his own or an anonymous league source’s—and it can be impossible to tell what he is actually reporting.
Did the Irony Police make it over to the new board yet? That's a Deadspin writer writing those words.
Am I putting Woj in a LeBron category where you can't criticize anything he does? No. He's fair game like anyone else. But this piece just didn't make much sense to me.