Hoop Recap: Lift The Trophy High

Wassup y’all! Ya boy (it me, ya boy) is back with another hoop recap. There is so much to cover and touch on in the hoop realm that using NBA or WNBA couldn’t encompass it all. So going forward, that’s the new title. 

Alright, so this will likely be the last post from me in 2024. And I’m sure like most of you reading this, this year was more than a doozy in so many ways. I have had my share of setbacks and challenges that latch themselves onto the negative feelings like doubt and anxiety that cause me to not feel like I’m progressing every day. And that doesn’t include any physical problems that have arisen throughout the year. Since January 1st—and of course, well before that date—life has certainly done life things in a way that doesn’t always feel good. 

Doesn’t it also seem like this is both the longest and shortest year ever? In the winter, nighttime feels like it comes before business hours are closed, as of the Sun decides to clock out early because even it needs a break sometimes. At the same time, something like Caitlin Clark’s first WNBA game feels like forever shi when that was in May. Six months ago, Kawhi Leonard was set to play on Team USA in the Olympics and we haven’t seen him play basketball at all since that very same month of May. With the constant cycle of problem, solution and outcome, we can lean into the fatigue and feel like there isn’t much to celebrate. 

But that does not mean there is nothing to celebrate. 

To tie it in with hoop, the Milwaukee Bucks just won the 2nd Emirates NBA Cup, defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in Vegas. Bucks assistant coach and former Lakers head coach Darvin Ham led Los Angeles to the Cup last year, and he suggested to the Bucks to avoid celebrating with champagne like the Lakers did in order to leave room that there is now work to be done during the season. The Cup is nice, and it certainly is something worth winning, but the goal of NBA teams is to hoist the Finals trophy much more than it is to lift the Cup one. 

So Milwaukee didn’t use the separate room to celebrate winning the Cup (and the $500k each) by spraying bottles of bubbly everywhere. But they did celebrate, and that’s my point. 

One thing this and recent years have taught me, aided by the institution of sports and championships, is that we celebrate the entirety of the journey. The final step to victory is worth it because of everything that led up to it. If you notice, when people give thanks and acknowledgments after winning something, the phrase, “along the way” is intimated throughout their words. That’s not coincidence. When you win, everything contributed to that win. Yes, the strategies that worked and the great days are essential. But so are the bruises, the doubts, the streak of days that lead to ideas like “slump” and “regression” to take root. The pursuit of excellence is not easy. And because it is not easy, it is lined with mistakes. But mistakes are the soil for greatness, because from a mistake, we decide that we can be better and start the voyage towards it. 

So I say to you, for 2024, lift your trophy high. You earned it. 

Till Takes! 

  • The NBA is deciding to change the All-Star Game format to a quick pickup game tournament. I will maintain that the NBA has tricked fans into both believing these players don’t play hard and that they should always and only be concerned with winning championships. That begs of the question: why is it necessary for these nine-figure assets—because that’s what they are to these billion-dollar franchises—to take an exhibition game seriously? Why is it paramount to know they care to win this game as badly as a regular season or playoff game? The All-Star Game is a celebration of the best players of the first half of the season and acknowledging how good they’ve been so far. It is not a competitive battle for some arbitrary measure of effort. And those of you who believe it have allowed billionaires and party poopers mislead you into siding with management and not labor. 
  • With USC and UConn set to okay in women’s college hoops, that game will feature Juju Watkins and Paige Bueckers. It is the rare occasion that both those young women have claim to the best guard in the country and that neither of them are that right now. I say that because Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo has begun her sophomore campaign with an amplified moxie and productivity, even as fellow All-American Olivia Miles is back with the Irish. Hidalgo is over 25 points a game and is her usual menacing self on defense. The Irish will be a tough out come March. 

That’s it for me in 2024. See y’all on the other side with another year and more hoop stories to recap. 

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