NBA Archives - Media Guy Struggles https://mediaguystruggles.com/category/nba/ The Media Guy. Screenwriter. Photographer. Emmy Award-winning Dreamer. Magazine editor. Ad Exec. A new breed of Mad Men. Thu, 20 Jul 2023 05:40:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://mediaguystruggles.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/MEDIA-GUY-1-100x100.png NBA Archives - Media Guy Struggles https://mediaguystruggles.com/category/nba/ 32 32 221660568 Banned Media https://mediaguystruggles.com/banned-media/ https://mediaguystruggles.com/banned-media/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2020 22:20:00 +0000 Okay, so where am I? I’m hunkered down in my office disinfecting everything, including my phone, my desk, my water bottles and mugs, and even my 10-minute sand timer that’s been on my various desks for thirty plus years. Yes, the coronavirus (COVID-19) hysteria has hit multiple workplaces. Yes, people are freaking out. I mean, even […]

The post Banned Media appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>

Okay, so where am I?

I’m hunkered down in my office disinfecting everything, including my phone, my desk, my water bottles and mugs, and even my 10-minute sand timer that’s been on my various desks for thirty plus years. Yes, the coronavirus (COVID-19) hysteria has hit multiple workplaces. Yes, people are freaking out. I mean, even Costco has stopped giving out free samples and the stock market is tanking. And no, I don’t have the virus and I have seldom even been susceptible to the flu. It’s business as usual for me.

Or so I thought…

But now it’s hitting the sports world and this Media Guy is none too happy. Most of you know that in addition to the four jobs I already have, I cover the Los Angeles Kings at various levels. One of the things I do are game recaps (here’s a couple recents: vs. Colorado / vs. Minnesota / vs. Vegas). This may or may not involve locker room access, but now that’s a moot point as four major sports leagues (NBA, NHL, MLB and MLS) have banned media from locker rooms due to coronavirus. The four also jointly announced that locker room access will be limited to players and essential personnel. The Professional Basketball Writers Association issued a statement saying it would temporarily comply with the ban.

Now teams aren’t allowing contact with the players and the media. Some, like the Calgary Flames, are putting do not not cross lines in pre- and post-game interviews instead of the normal scrums outside lockers in the dressing rooms.

Click on this pic to see the white line placed on the floor to separate players from the media with eight feet of space. This is the new daily interviewing setup in pro sports. Strange times indeed. pic.twitter.com/F5pnI5eC1T

— Eric Francis (@EricFrancis) March 10, 2020

Other teams have only banned actions (handshakes, knuckles, hugs, sitting) and not actual media members…

#Avs have elected to keep the locker room open for media with the following rules: pic.twitter.com/f26EEKQsOJ

— Ryan S. Clark (@ryan_s_clark) March 8, 2020

In California, they took the outbreak a step further. Santa Clara County’s Public Health Department announced today that a mandatory order requiring cancellation of “mass gatherings” of more than 1,000 people for three weeks is in effect. They put the order in place while it studies the spread of the virus. This means that the status of three San Jose Sharks games, the NCAA women’s basketball tournament at Stanford, and an MLS game are in doubt. They could be playing these games in empty arenas. I remember in 1980, NBC tried a game with no announcers. But a game without fans? How surreal.





I guess that is better that canceling the outcome of an entire season where Germany’s pro hockey league announced the end of its season, with no playoffs and “there is no German champion this year.” Here’s the official announcement (use the Google translate option to read in full).

In Italy, there are no sporting events…

Breaking: All sports in Italy have been halted because of the coronavirus outbreak, Italy Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte confirmed in a television address on Monday. pic.twitter.com/eLp4YRIeTT

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) March 9, 2020

The NHL’s Columbus Blue Jacket are having no part of Ohio’s ban on indoor events…
All #CBJ scheduled games will go on as scheduled and be open to ticketed fans.

Full Statement ⤵ https://t.co/mLN5ImQVlE

— Columbus Blue Jackets (@BlueJacketsNHL) March 10, 2020

How will this affect the Media Guy? I’ll continue to write my columns and fill in the time helping corporations who know to call me before releasing questionable content with a multi-million dollar ad campaign. So, until all of this blows over, remember this useful World Health Organization video on how to wash your hands:

The post Banned Media appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>
https://mediaguystruggles.com/banned-media/feed/ 0 11381
MGS Chat: Kobe Bryant https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-kobe-bryant/ https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-kobe-bryant/#respond Mon, 04 Jan 2016 20:18:00 +0000 http://mediaguystruggles.com/2016/01/04/mgs-chat-kobe-bryant/ On the occasion of Kobe Bryant’s retirement announcement, I was able to do a sit down with arguably the greatest Laker of all-time and top ten NBA legend… MEDIA GUY: You said in the past you didn’t want a farewell tour when you retire. Now that you have announced you’re going to retire at the […]

The post MGS Chat: Kobe Bryant appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>

On the occasion of Kobe Bryant’s retirement announcement, I was able to do a sit down with arguably the greatest Laker of all-time and top ten NBA legend…

MEDIA GUY: You said in the past you didn’t want a farewell tour when you retire. Now that you have announced you’re going to retire at the end of the season, a farewell tour is basically what you are getting every time you go outside L.A. How is it feeling?

Copyright 2015 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

KOBE BRYANT: It was feeling – it feels great, actually. I mean, you know, I don’t really consider it much of a tour. I think it – like the way it’s been going has been so beautiful. I mean just like I’m paying my respects to the fans and they’re doing the same in turn. I just think it’s just a beautiful moment that takes place. After 20 years of playing to be able to – for me to say thank you to them and them to say thank you back, I couldn’t have imagined it any better than it is.

MG: In the past 20 years building your legacy, when you step off the court for the last time as a player, what did you leave behind for yourself, and more important, what would you take with you?

KB: I think what I leave from behind, I don’t know if I leave anything behind outside of just the physical representation of what my 20-year career has been, right? So, you know, the training, the actual act of going out and playing and scoring and defending and doing those sorts of things. Kind of like the shell of who I’ve been for the last 20 years, I think that’s what I leave behind. But what carries on with me is the spirit that represents those physical manifestations. So, the understanding of perseverance, of how to deal with failure, how to handle successes, understanding how to communicate with others, understanding how to understand others, empathy, compassion and things like that. Those are things that I’ll carry with me forever, so as I’m leaving behind kind of like the physical shell of what I’ve been for 20 years, everything else I’m carrying with me forever.

MG: Adam Silver said last week that he would very much like to have you involved in All-Star weekend. With no disrespect, if you’re not voted in by the fans or selected by the coaches, would you like some sort of honorary role in the last All-Star Weekend of your long career?

KB: You know, I think I’ve been very fortunate to have played in so many All-Star games. For me, to not be voted in, I know it’s hard really to process but when I say that I’m completely fine with that because I’ve had an amazing run, right? And at some point you have to be able to be okay with letting that go, you know, and you have to be okay with passing the game along and doing all you can to help the game continue to grow and continue to evolve, right? So that’s my way of letting you know that I’m completely fine with whatever role I’d have at All-Star weekend.

MG: What were the top five best players and the best teams you’ve faced in your career in the NBA?

KB: Let’s see. Top five teams that I’ve faced, I’d probably say San Antonio Spurs were always tough. Sacramento Kings in the playoffs were tough. The Boston Celtics in 2008 were tough. Detroit Pistons in 2004 were tough. I’d say the Chicago Bulls, obviously when I first came in the league they were tough.

Top players, let’s see: Hakeem Olajuwan, Michael Jordan, Kevin Durant, LeBron James, Clyde Drexler. I have to – players is a little tougher for me because I came in the league where there were so many great players playing like John Stockton was still playing; Clyde Drexler was still playing. Gary Payton, Anfernee – I mean it was a lot of – so the top five players is a little tough for me.

MG: The first thing when people hear the name of LA Lakers is the first thing they think of is Kobe Bryant. So what do you think of the Lakers will be like as a team after you’ve left? Are there any guys you consider being the next potential big star for the Lakers? Second, could you imagine coming back to the Lakers one day as a trainer or mentor?

KB: I’ll answer the last question first. I think I’ll always be around and not just from a Lakers’ standpoint but also just with players around the league just to be a mentor to continue to talk and help them out through things and I’ve done that for a while now and I’ll continue to do that.

In terms of the Lakers, I mean the Lakers are going to continue to represent what they’ve always represented which is excellence. I mean they’ve always stood for that. They’ve always stood for winning championships and that being the most important thing. You know, Magic represented that. I happen to represent that and the next player will represent that as well. So I don’t see that changing much at all. I mean we’ll obviosuly go through periods of rebuilding and things of that nature but the core of the organization and the franchise will always be the same which is winning.

MG: The last time you were in Africa was in 2010 for the World Cup. With your retirement would we be seeing you more at the NBA’s global events in Africa?

KB: Well, yeah. I definitely plan on helping the game spread and helping kids all around the world understand the kind of the metaphors that come along with the game, right? When I was growing up, I was a product of that growing up overseas. So, you know, when I step away from the game I definitely look forward to visiting places like Africa and being able to teach the game and all that surrounds it. So, yes.

MG: When you do retire, will there be a certain relief that you won’t have to put your body and your mind through all the pressures that come with being a great basketball player, or will you actually miss the tension of being of an elite athlete?

KB: That is a very complicated answer. You know, it’s not the healthiest of choices to make to be able to live this way, you know what I mean? I think I’m one of the people that actually enjoy it and a certain aspect, like when the summer time comes around, for example, when you’re not in that frame of mind, you realize how peaceful and how relaxing life could be. But then you’re also not comfortable because you’re used to and you like being that feeling of constant pressure and constant training and body being sore and always, you know, worrying about the next game or whatever, right? So, there is something that is like an adjustment period I think to not being able to have this type of pressure, not being able to have those moments that I think is going to be a bit of an adjustment.

MG: Given the way you handled the expectations so well throughout your career, I wanted to know what sort of advice you’d have for someone like Ben Simmons who is coming in as a potential number one draft pick next season. Also, if you’ve had a chance to watch Ben, what are your impressions of him?

KB: So, I think he’s a fantastic player. I think he has obviously a tremendous amount of potential. I think the key really is just loving what you do. I mean that’s the magic of it, man, is really loving it and you know you love it when you actually enjoy the process of it all. So, you know, if you love getting ready, if you love training, if you love preparing just as much as you love the end result of winning or even moreso than the end result of winning, then you know you have something truly, truly special and that’s something that you can’t beat. That’s something that you can’t bring out of a person. You either love that thing or you don’t.

MG: After you retire do you have more specific plans to come back to Shanghai or China to do more activities?

KB: I do definitely plan on coming back more and continuing to teach the game, continuing to help the kids not just about the game of basketball but understanding all that surrounds the game of basketball and the potentials that are there as well. So, you know, I definitely look forward to coming back there more than I’ve been able to do in the past because of schedules.

MG: Allen Iverson said a few days ago there will never, ever be another player like Kobe Bryant. Do you agree with that? And if you do, do you see someone close to you among the young players, for example?

KB: Well, I mean, you know, we’re all different players, you know what I mean? We’re all different players, we’re all different people. There’s never another Magic, there’s never another Bird, there’s never another Michael, now there’s never another me just because we’re just different people. I mean the way I went about it is different. The way the next player will go about it will be different as well, right? So, you know, we all kind of do things our own way.

I think there’s a lot of young talent in this league today. I think there’s – the game has been skewed a little more towards point guards and there being a tremendous amount of – you know, that being said, I think there’s going to be a player that over the next ten years is going rise above them all, maybe, right? He’s got to be a player that comes out and wins more championships than everybody else and maybe they’ll be that player and maybe there won’t be. Maybe there will be so much parity around the league. Maybe one player will win it one year, another player will win it the next year and then kind of go back and forth. So that remains to be seen.

Copyright 2015 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

MG: Do you think in these past years with all your injuries, do you think if the basketball gods have treated you unfairly, and if there’s any chance – you said in the past that you would like some time playing with Pau in Barcelona. Is there any chance that we see that?

KB: So, I’ll answer the last question. I would have loved to have played overseas for a season but it’s not going to happen. I wish I could have done it but I can’t. Body won’t let me and that’s completely fine.

In terms of the basketball gods, no, I think we have a very good relationship. I mean we understand each other very well and I think it’s our responsibility as athletes to take advantage of the opportunities that present themselves, good, bad or indifferent. So, whatever comes my way I’m absolutely able to pivot and to handle those situations and deal with those situations. You know, the injuries that I’ve had, I’ve always been able to look at those from a positive light and learn from those things, and also take advantage of opportunities that come as a direct result of those injuries – other things to focus on, other things to plan for. So, no, I don’t think the basketball gods have treated me unfairly. I think they’ve given me a fantastic opportunity.

MG: What’s changed in the past six games since you announced your retirement? Prior to that you were shooting below 30% and now you’re shooting almost 50%? Has there been just more relaxing, a more enjoyable tour for you?

KB: No, I don’t think so. I think it was a matter of my legs catching up and I think it’s a matter of my timing catching up too. I mean it’s very easy for us to kind of get caught up in the emotionality of it all and kind of forget to look at the tactics of it all. And what my body has been through for the last three seasons, I mean my body has been through a lot; physically, it’s been through a lot. Then on top of the fact it’s very easy to forget that I haven’t played because of it, right? So, the last three years I haven’t really had a chance to play that much in the NBA and so the timing is off, rhythm is off, things like that, so it was really just a matter of me being patient with myself, continuing to train, continuing to trust the training that I’ve done all summer and continue to do during the season and believe that eventually the timing will come back. I think really that’s what happened.

MG: Are you are coming to the Olympic Games in Rio and repeat what Magic Johnson did in ’92? If you would like to end your career playing alongside LeBron and Curry?

KB: I mean we’ll see. I mean it’s not something I’m absolutely pressing for but being part of the Olympics is such a beautiful experience. I grew up overseas. I grew up in Italy so to be able to see how basketball became such an international sport firsthand, it would be a beautiful thing personally to be able to finish my career on an international stage. But that being said, we’ll see how everything goes.

MG: Which place do you think you will occupy in NBA history after your retirement; Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson and everybody, what place do you think you will have in history? Behind them or next to them?

KB: You know, the way I look at it is I try to look at my legacy and how it impacts the future of the game. So I’m not looking at my legacy from the standpoint of where do I fit in with the greatest of all time; to me that’s a moot point and for me personally it’s much of a shallow argument. I think the most important thing and the most beautiful thing is how does your legacy impact the generation of players to come or the generation of players that are currently playing. If I feel like what I’ve done and what I’ve stood for for these 20 years has impacted the players today and the players tomorrow in a positive way in the way that they can then carry that legacy on themselves and impact the generation to follow, I think that’s much more significant than where I stand in history.

MG: You talked about growing up in Italy and being kind of a soccer fan. I wanted to get your take on the eight-year bans handed down to Platini and Sepp Blatter today. How much do you follow the game now and do you think this is – just the corruption thing going on is a big first step to maybe cleaning house and getting world football in a good place?

KB: Yes. Yes, I think that’s always a touchy thing, right, because you’re dealing with such big business. It’s impossible to monitor and manage everything every step of the way, so I think this is an important first step to clean up the sport. You know, we like to think in our society and in our culture with life being as tough and as brutal as it is sometimes that we can escape all of that stuff through the purity of sport, right? Sports is supposed to be an escapism for us all and when something like this happens, you know, it really damages kind of the emotional Shangri-La that you get from enjoying sport, right? So I think it’s the first step. I think there’s much more to do but I’m sure they’re on top of it and I’m sure the sport will be as pure as we once believed it to be.

MG: What was your teammates reaction when you dunked on Clint Capela. After all you’ve achieved in your career, what did you make of that? Secondly, what do the Lakers need to do to move on after Kobe Bryant?

KB: How they reacted is pretty much how I was feeling inside. I mean in the things that I’ve accomplished, you know, being able to drive and dunk like that after all that my body has been through was one of the special moments of my career. My body has been through a lot, man, so, you know, to be able to get to the basket and to elevate and finish like that for me was like a – it was personally gratifying. It was like it was a reward for all of the hours that I spend training and working and stretching and, you know, so it felt good to see that hard work pay off. So, I was – you know, I was very excited to see them excited. You know what I mean?

Then your follow-up question was about the Lakers and what they can do going forward. I mean what we do going forward is just make smart decisions, make smart choices. Build the team; that’s what we have to do. We have to build the championship caliber team. We have to get talent. We have to make smart decisions, smart trades, creative acquisitions, things of that nature. We just have to make smart choices.

MG: When you do look back on your career, the respect that you’ve got across the league, you’ve got a big game coming up in Boston and, you know, even though the fans have given you a fair bit of criticism over the years, I guess, there’s also that respect there. Are you looking forward to playing there?

KB: I am looking forward to playing there. That’s always been one of my favorite places to play. The fans are so knowledgeable about the game and there’s so much history in that city, so much history. They’re extremely conscious of that, as am I, and so it’s always been a special place to play. Playing them in two Finals, you know, as a kid I dreamed about having those moments countless times.  So to go there one last time and play and be in that city one more time is going to be a beautiful, beautiful moment.

The post MGS Chat: Kobe Bryant appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>
https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-kobe-bryant/feed/ 0 11599
MGS Chat: Mitch Kupchak https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-mitch-kupchak/ https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-mitch-kupchak/#respond Thu, 22 May 2014 01:35:00 +0000 http://mediaguystruggles.com/2014/05/22/mgs-chat-mitch-kupchak/ Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak spoke to reporters from his office on Wednesday morning, discussing both Tuesday’s draft lottery and the team’s ongoing coaching search. On receiving the seventh pick and if he thinks there is anyone in the draft who can change the face of the franchise at that spot: I wouldn’t say it […]

The post MGS Chat: Mitch Kupchak appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>

Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak spoke to reporters from his office on Wednesday morning, discussing
both Tuesday’s draft lottery and the team’s ongoing coaching search.

On receiving the seventh pick and if he thinks there is
anyone in the draft who can change the face of the franchise at that spot:
I wouldn’t say it was bad luck. We were hoping to get
lucky, but as you know we could have dropped down to number nine, too. We were
hoping to get lucky, or at worst case, stay where we were, but it could have
been worse. As far as what [Boston Celtics Executive] Danny [Ainge] said,
that’s up to him. We think drafting number seven, there is going to be a good
player available there. Maybe Danny is talking more about a guy that changes
the face of an organization from the get-go, but you can’t really evaluate
these things until years later when you look back on it. Damian Lillard is a
great example. I don’t think anybody thought walking through the draft that he
would turn into the player [he is] as quickly as he did, but looking back on it
is a heck of a selection. We will be able to get a good player, and we are
hoping that three or four years from now we can look back on it and he is even a
better player than we thought.
On the impact a player selected seventh overall can make:
Well, it depends. Most of the players in the draft for
the last 15 to 18 years have been young, developing players and some of them
make a contribution quicker than others. There are certainly a couple of guys
that played more than two years. There is a kid that played four years that
might make a contribution quicker. I’m not saying he would be someone we would
consider or not consider at seven. My point is, typically – and we have kind of
gotten used to it over the years – you do have to work with the younger player
and those are the guys that get drafted the highest, whether they are freshman
or sophomore, it may take a year or two.
On if a player selected seventh can be a starter on the
Lakers right now:
Right now. We only four guys under contract right now.
On how the lottery occurring affects the offseason moving
forward:
It is another piece of information. It doesn’t really get
us any further along in hiring a coach, but it is another piece of information.
Right now, the day after the lottery, it doesn’t really affect our approach to
the offseason beginning July 1st.
On when he will become more immersed in the search for a
head coach:
I would say we actually – and I’m sure names will come
out within the next couple of days – but we have started our process and we
intend to continue the process in terms of talking to potential coaches.
Whether they are informal or formal interviews, we will do both. I would not anticipate
hiring a coach in the next two or three weeks, but we will interview several,
more than three or four, probably.
On if the process of searching for a new coach has begun:
Yes, we have begun.
On the variables the front office is measuring in
potential coaching candidates and whether they want to pursue a veteran coach
or a young coach:
I think right now, our interviews will be formal in terms
of sitting down and talking for a couple of hours, but at some point, we will
probably have to sit down and talk a second time. I think that is where we are
right now, at the beginning of the process. Whether it is a veteran coach or a
rookie coach, that is not something we are prepared to comment on right now.
On the talent evaluation process at the NBA Draft Combine:
The combine has really evolved over the years, and
probably the most useful information out of the combine is really the interview
process and the testing and the medical/physical process. There is very limited
basketball activity, and the guys that did workout, really none of them are
“lottery players,” at least last week. Based on workouts going forward, maybe
somebody can jump in there but right now that quality of player, and that is
not to say the other guys at the combine that did work out won’t be in the NBA
and won’t be drafted perhaps in the first round, but as you know most of the
“lottery guys” did not play.
On if they will focus on the drafting in the seventh spot
or continue to look at other options:
We started last night calling and trying to set up
workouts with probably everybody on our board in the top 15 to 20. Some of
those guys don’t think they are going to be there at seven so they won’t come
in. There is nothing we can do about that. But some guys that are drafted
later, and you may say ‘well why bring in a guy that might go 20?’ Well you
never know, number one, and number two, you have the opportunity to develop a
relationship with a player. Why not do it? So that started last night.
On if the NBA playoffs are a factor in the timing of a
possible coaching hire:
Right now it is not a factor, but like I said I don’t see
the process ending in the next two or three weeks. It depends how the process
goes. We may want to open it up and consider other people.
On if other teams head coaching vacancies or hires have
impacted the Lakers coaching search thus far:
No.
On if drafting at seven influences whether to keep or
trade the pick:
It stands to reason that the higher the pick, the more
value it has, but a six pick or a seven pick, which is where we ended up
certainly has value. We will evaluate that between now, the draft and July 1st.
On if there is extra value financially in players on
rookie contracts:
Well, that is one of the benefits of having draft picks,
that there is a salary scale going forward. If it is a first-round pick, you
can basically pencil in four years of salary. Then the fifth year, if he signs
a one-year deal, you pretty much know that [the player’s salary]. So really you
have salary-certainty for five years on a first-round pick. The second round is
a little bit different. Yeah it [salary certainty] is a factor, but it is not
really that much of a factor with us because we have only one pick this year.
Yeah, we know what that pick is going to make, but we still have to field a
roster of seven to eight more players.
On if the coach hiring process will be different:
I think, clearly, it will be a longer process for obvious
reasons. I assume you are alluding to our last hire, Mike D’Antoni, which
really took less than a week. This process will be considerably longer for a
bunch of different reasons. Number one: We have a lot more time. Number two: We
don’t really know what our team looks like and there is no urgency right now.
It will be a more deliberate process.
On if there are particular offensive and defensive
philosophies the Lakers are looking for in a coaching candidate:
I wouldn’t use the word philosophy, but we have a player
on our team right now who is proven in this league. Offensively, he can score
and that certainly is a consideration. Obviously I’m talking about Kobe
[Bryant]. He is under contract for two more years and we think he is a very
integral part of this team. We have to make sure that whoever we hire as a
coach will really get the most productivity out of him, whether it is scoring
the ball or playmaking or the threat that he may score. That is probably a
primary importance right now.
On how he thinks Kobe Bryant will be used offensively in
the next two years:
We haven’t seen much of him in the last year. He has been
over here working out and he looks good. Over the years his game has changed
from really a game where he was pretty wild and athletic and at times
out-of-control in the early part of his career. I would say for the last seven
or eight years, he has become more deliberate and, of course, he has gotten a
little bit older. I think you will see a lot of him posting up, I think you
will see him with the ball in his hands making plays. [At the] end of games, he
is going to have the ball in his hands, he is going to get a call, he is going
to make free throws. The Kobe today is different than the Kobe 15 years ago,
and I don’t think that’s a secret. I think Kobe knows where on the court he
will be most effective, whether it is playmaking, being a decoy, or scoring the
ball, and I think we know where those places are.
On if hiring a coach currently employed by another team
is a possibility:
Why wouldn’t it be a possibility? We don’t have a
timeline. If we had a timeline for tomorrow or Friday, or the weekend, then I
would say that is remote. But I mentioned earlier, this is going to go on at
least two or three weeks. I’m not anticipating what you just mentioned being a
part of the process, but we will just monitor how it plays out with the teams
that are out there and see what the playing field provides and make decisions
accordingly.
On if a candidate for head coach will need to have
previous coaching experience:
Not necessarily, but if I have to say we were leaning
towards the type of a coach we would want, I would say there would be
experience involved, certainly at some level, but not necessarily. It’s just
too early in the process.

The post MGS Chat: Mitch Kupchak appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>
https://mediaguystruggles.com/mgs-chat-mitch-kupchak/feed/ 0 11650
QUICK HITS: Uniform Advertising https://mediaguystruggles.com/quick-hits-uniform-advertising/ https://mediaguystruggles.com/quick-hits-uniform-advertising/#respond Tue, 31 Jul 2012 16:48:00 +0000 http://mediaguystruggles.com/2012/07/31/quick-hits-uniform-advertising/ The allure is there. The commercialization of sports. The money grab. The spontaneous dismissal of tradition. I’ve heard it all this week in response to the National Basketball Association’s announcement that they will soon sell advertising on their jersey—a move the league says could generate an additional $100 million. The outrage is borderline comical; after all, we live in […]

The post QUICK HITS: Uniform Advertising appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>

The allure is there. The commercialization of sports. The money grab. The spontaneous dismissal of
tradition.

I’ve heard it all this week in response to the National Basketball
Association’s announcement that they will soon sell advertising on their jersey—a
move the league says could generate an additional $100 million.
The outrage is borderline comical; after all, we live in the land of
product placement. You can’t go through an hour of television without seeing an
iPad or Pepsi inserted into every third scene on Modern Family or Two and Half
Men
.
I say, “What took them so long?”
No one seems to mind all of the sponsor logos in NASCAR or the English
Premiere League. So let the Wells Fargo Celtics and the Sbarro Knicks and the Target
Timberwolves reign supreme.
Branding is king, so don’t get yourself in an uproar.
As someone who appreciates a smart advertising campaign, I salute the
NBA as a (once again) trailblazer being the first of the major sport to sell
jerseys as walking billboards.
In a decade, as the crowds roar for the Dallas Mavericks brought to you by
Citibank, you most likely won’t recall that anything was ever different.

The post QUICK HITS: Uniform Advertising appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>
https://mediaguystruggles.com/quick-hits-uniform-advertising/feed/ 0 11724
En Fuego! https://mediaguystruggles.com/en-fuego/ https://mediaguystruggles.com/en-fuego/#respond Sun, 19 Sep 2010 06:10:00 +0000 http://mediaguystruggles.com/2010/09/19/en-fuego/ So there I was. The dreaded networking event. I’ve said it before that I’m not a command-the-room-kind-of-guy. I’m definitely the get-to-know-you-kind-of-guy. I like to sit down with you and have a drink and bond with you in a beneath-the-surface conversation. Anyway there I was and guess what? I was on fire; en fuego; I couldn’t […]

The post En Fuego! appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>

So there I was. The dreaded networking event. I’ve said it before that I’m not a command-the-room-kind-of-guy. I’m definitely the get-to-know-you-kind-of-guy. I like to sit down with you and have a drink and bond with you in a beneath-the-surface conversation. Anyway there I was and guess what? I was on fire; en fuego; I couldn’t be stopped. To my tipsy surprise, I mingled and networked like I never have before. Maybe it was the Mad Men-esque Old Fashioned I slipped into, or maybe it was the contemporary grind and ascension mode I’m test driving. Whatever it was, tonight I was ON!

Okay kiddies, grab a cappuccino and sober up…have I got news for you! In the highly anticipated NBA supplier bash, there was much merriment and one very jawdropping incident. As the business glitterati assembled at a Downtown Los Angeles the mood was festive. The usual suspects were there. The mayor, council members, business wanna-bees and D-list celebrities. As people snatched their mini NBA signature gift bags replete with basketball textured notebooks, I literally bumped into Susan (last name deleted to protect the slightly innocent) a teacher’s assistant whom I had longingly stalked since my days at UCLA’s Anderson School of Business. She’s now a bigwig at a (company name deleted until I get the account) mutual fund broker.

Maybe I’m just being romantic in my description, but she’s got this elegant, yet quietly wild look going for her. Clad with a Hermes (hey that’s Hermes with an “M”) bag and big Jackie O scarf she’s got this “I’m the woman who has it all” signature look down pat. She’s stunning. Really, if Grace Kelly and Gregory Peck were to have a love child the result would be this woman. I felt like I needed to find a bartender and channel my inner Don Draper.

Then it happened.

After exchanging pleasantries, she noted something was different. The modified goatee? The new impeccably tailored sport coat? “Nah,” I told her. “I got back in touch with Mr. Workout.”

That’s when the Old Fashioned kicked in and carried me towards Zen. I recalled my pep-talk from a workout mentor, Vern Jeffery…”You’ve reallocated your priorities Michael. That shift has rippling consequences and it impacts every aspect of your life including your physical health. You watch, once you like how you appear in the mirror, you’ll be rolling forward in your personal and professional life.”

As the haze lifted a bit, she handed me her card and said “I’ll set up a meeting with the marketing director.”

Now the slimmer, sleeker Media Guy is evolving with my new workout regimen. How did I get to that point 30 pounds ago?

I recently emerged from what only could be defined as a “regretful bout with alcohol and barbeque” I ate and drank stress away while wobbling in my Ferragamos. To the utter gasp of friends and colleagues (and the delight of Arrogant Bob in accounting) I was a mess.

With a new balance and the proper stacking of priorities, the Media Guy being en fuego isn’t the shocking experience it was in March when I needed a new secret identity.

The post En Fuego! appeared first on Media Guy Struggles.

]]>
https://mediaguystruggles.com/en-fuego/feed/ 0 11798