That's an interesting read. When Woj is on his game, when he's good, he's very good. When he's bad though, it's ugly.
I think a problematic by-product of his tendency to churn out columns so quickly and regularly is that the perspective he offers is very much focused on the last thing that happened, rather than the bigger picture. There's nothing wrong with that per se - as the facts change, it's fine for your opinion to change, too - but it does make for some very inconsistent and "flip-flopping" observations during the Playoffs. He's written pieces that have chided LeBron James for his shortcomings after losses in which he underperformed, only to talk about his legacy and how he's asserting himself as the best player in the league when he's performed well in a bounce-back victory.
Spree#8 wrote:For whatever it's worth, they're 3-6 since the near-historically bad start. Still bad, but not a complete laughingstock. The slightly easier schedule, lack of injuries to key players and lack of the mental pressure of historic futility allows them to kind of hold their own most of the time, even if they still lose.
That's why I feel the whole uproar over tanking is overblown. It's not like they aren't try to compete and aiming to win games. It's just that starting over from scratch has made that very difficult, and the team is willing to weather than in the name of getting better in the future and not settling for mediocrity at an unreasonable price. Produce hard evidence that the one or two teams that are "tanking" are actively throwing games, and that's a scandal-worthy situation that should be addressed. Until then, the integrity of the game remains intact.