作者RonnieBrewer (Reverse Layup)
看板UTAH-JAZZ
標題Fisher's situation a reality check
時間Thu Jul 5 00:54:23 2007
Fisher's situation a reality check
By Ann Killion
Mercury News
Article Launched: 07/04/2007 01:36:02 AM PDT
Can we take a moment to honor perspective?
We get so precious little of it in sports these days. So when a situation
comes along, in which everyone involved handles things with dignity and with
a full grasp on reality, it is a moment worth celebrating.
So today we honor Derek Fisher. And his former employers, the Utah Jazz.
On Monday, Fisher requested and was granted by Utah a release from his
contract.
He walks away from three years that would earn him $20.6 million
- with no guarantees that at 33 he'll ever get a contract like that again.
And the Jazz, whose berth in the Western Conference finals was in no small
part thanks to Fisher's veteran presence, is left with a gap in leadership
and experience. The Jazz management is fully aware that Fisher could sign
with the rival Los Angeles Lakers later this year.
Lots of issues involving money and power and ego. Yet everyone did the right
thing.
We all witnessed firsthand the emotional hurricane that surrounded Fisher
during the NBA playoffs, when his 11-month-old daughter, Tatum, was diagnosed
with retinoblastoma, a rare cancerous tumor in her eye. On the night of Game
2 of the series against the Warriors, Fisher flew directly from a New York
hospital to Salt Lake City, making a dramatic entrance. He helped his team
win that game and win the series.
Tatum, who had her first birthday last week, is currently undergoing treatment
in New York, while Fisher and his wife seek the most comprehensive program for
their daughter. They want to move to the city where Tatum will be under the
care of the best specialists treating the disease - care that Fisher said is
available in only a handful of cities.
Fisher didn't want to consider being in Salt Lake City while his family
struggled with the illness elsewhere.
"Life for me outweighs the game of basketball," Fisher said.
Of course it does. Of course a father needs to be near his ill child. Of
course an employer would let the employee do what is best for his family.
It's the human decision, one that any of us would make.
But it doesn't always work that way in sports. Too often we see petty
differences and stupid contract fights. Too often decisions are made from the
positions of greed and power. Made to squeeze the last dollar amount out of a
team (hello, Don Nelson?) or made to exert complete control over another human
being.
So we wouldn't really have been shocked if the Jazz denied Fisher's request
out of fear that he might sign with a rival. Team owner
Larry Miller, who wept
at Monday's news conference, said that
he was initially skeptical and thought
Fisher was just trying to force his way out of Salt Lake City. But he became
convinced when he realized how much money Fisher was abandoning.
"I know it's hard for people to imagine at this point what I'm giving up,"
Fisher said. "And what my family and I are giving up in terms of what we've
established in my career, and this contract that I worked my entire life to
secure. It's the risk that we have to take at this point."
Nor would we really have been shocked if a professional athlete worked the
angles somehow - delaying a decision until he could collect some of next
year's money, or leaving the Jazz in a bind. That too, sadly, is the kind of
thing we see too often in sports.
The cynics might still see something rotten. If the Lakers sign Fisher, the
conspiracy theories will start, as though Fisher would ever have chosen this
path. But that's the sad side of sports we've been conditioned to accept.
"We're sitting here and everybody seems sad about this," Jazz General Manager
Kevin O'Connor said. "I think what we should be is grateful there is somebody
that cares as much about his family. And somebody that owns the team and
cares as much for the same reasons."
Fisher doesn't know if he'll get another job, noting that he's only 6-foot-1
and averages about 10 points a game.
"I don't know how many people feel strongly about what I do," he said.
He was talking about on the court. On life's court, I think he'll find many
people feel very strongly about what he does.
Contact Ann Killion at akillion@mercurynews.com
http://www.mercurynews.com/annkillion/ci_6295836
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