SF_Express
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2003
- Messages
- 9,166
OK. T.J. Simers is taking a lot of heat for for his column about Marcus Thames.
We could debate this column all day, but I'd rather ask this:
Simers is taking some heat because Thames is apparently a nice guy, and because his mother was paralyzed from the neck down in 1982 and raised her children in spite of it. One woman asked if Simers was the biggest bully in baseball. Rob Neyer ripped him on SB Nation. The Big Lead. An MSNBC guy is all worked up.
So basically, some are asking: He's a great guy who has overcome a lot, so why pick on him?
To those people, I just want to ask: The next time you rip a guy for batting .195 in May, or dropping a potential touchdown pass in a big game, or going 2 for 15 and missing the tying 3 in the NBA Final, is your commentary going to take into consideration his personal history? What if the .195 guy lost his father in a car accident when he was 4; or the touchdown dropper saw his best friend murdered when he was 14? Hey, what if the NBA 3-misser's wife left him that day and took the kids?
You can disagree with Simers all you want, but in what we do, how much do we have to consider what has or is going on in an athlete's personal life and then pull our punches because of it?
I'm more interested in that discussion if anybody's game. Everybody in sports is a human being, but even the best columnists rip performance, basically saying, "Hey, you get paid millions to play a game, it comes with the territory."
Well, does it or doesn't it?
We could debate this column all day, but I'd rather ask this:
Simers is taking some heat because Thames is apparently a nice guy, and because his mother was paralyzed from the neck down in 1982 and raised her children in spite of it. One woman asked if Simers was the biggest bully in baseball. Rob Neyer ripped him on SB Nation. The Big Lead. An MSNBC guy is all worked up.
So basically, some are asking: He's a great guy who has overcome a lot, so why pick on him?
To those people, I just want to ask: The next time you rip a guy for batting .195 in May, or dropping a potential touchdown pass in a big game, or going 2 for 15 and missing the tying 3 in the NBA Final, is your commentary going to take into consideration his personal history? What if the .195 guy lost his father in a car accident when he was 4; or the touchdown dropper saw his best friend murdered when he was 14? Hey, what if the NBA 3-misser's wife left him that day and took the kids?
You can disagree with Simers all you want, but in what we do, how much do we have to consider what has or is going on in an athlete's personal life and then pull our punches because of it?
I'm more interested in that discussion if anybody's game. Everybody in sports is a human being, but even the best columnists rip performance, basically saying, "Hey, you get paid millions to play a game, it comes with the territory."
Well, does it or doesn't it?