Monday, July 27, 2009

He Blew His Mind Out


Stephon Marbury is sabotaging any other story ideas that could possibly come into my head (as well as also sabotaging my attempts to go to bed at a decent time at night). Starbury is sleeping right now so I have a chance to write something quick. How do I know he is asleep? Because he is still living in front of his webcam.

This is society's obsession with voyeuristic, reality television at its worst. If you haven't caught any of the surreal scene that has gone down over the past few days, you've truly missed out. Most of it has involved a wild-eyed, shirtless Marbury rambling incoherently, getting his head shaved and dancing to music. The parts I caught of this train derailment last night involved Marbury sitting in a darkened room, blasting the same Drake song over and over and dancing while doing the #1 sign with his hand. When he did speak, he went into extensive details on how to wash a woman's hair. Oh, and a few nights ago there were more than a few tears.




What has become obviously apparent is that this man needs help. He is in the throes of a mental breakdown of some sorts, with many speculating that it is chemically induced. I'd be called a hater by Starbury supporters for saying that, but this is based on facts, not hate. His emotions are all over the map, he is rambling about nonsense, his eyes are bugged out, and he doesn't seem to sleep too much. All pretty much warning signs that something is amiss. The boys at SLAM were trying to convince me a few days ago that Marbury has always been like this, but that is not very believable at this point (plus NYC tends to be overly protective of their basketball products).



Regardless, someone in the Starbury inner circle need to step in and stop this tragic scene. While this is highly entertaining (in a voyeuristic way) for the viewers, it amounts to nothing more than career suicide on Marbury's part. Yahoo's Adrian Wojnarowski confirmed as much in a column over the weekend - NBA executives are paying attention to this and are not in the least bit impressed. The free agent point guard was going to have a hard enough time getting himself signed as it was, even before this gong show. There are a few positions in sports that being a little loony is a good thing - hockey goaltender and closing pitcher are a few that come to mind - but NBA point guard is not one of them. Especially a 32-year-old who has a history of being a disruptive force on a team, shoots too much and still thinks he's a star.

This whole saga is tragic to say the least. Marbury is in no way a bad person - he is notably charitable and his cheap shoe line - Starbury - is a godsend for kids from low income families. Perhaps he isn't the best teammate or husband (see: backseat of truck, banging Knicks intern) but his heart seems to be in the right place. Which makes his descent into dementia a shame. With that being said, I better run - he's bound to wake up soon.






7 comments:

  1. Steve Francis, Stephon Marbury, Allen Iverson... it just seems like there were a rash of ballhogging "SG's in a PG's body" that came in to the league in the late 90's and early 2000's. All of them have inflated egos, which has left them unable to realize what every NBA GM believes: they aren't worth building around. My money's on Baron Davis being next. Possibly followed by Gilbert Arenas.

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  2. Undersized shooting guards (aka "combo guards" never turn out well (except for that Wade kid - he's pretty good I guess).

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  3. It's just weird how they all had an identically inflated sense of self-worth. Marbury is clearly the craziest of them all, but they all have one thing in common: they had the opportunity to tweak their game to become an excellent bench player but were to stubborn to give it a shot.

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  4. I want to learn more about the guy singing in his ear and why Stephon allowing him to molest him. What's going on below the shot? Is that why he's crying?

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  5. Just found out that at one point he ate Vaseline also. He's the real deal.

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  6. This whole episode is very sad. Guy is calling out for help. Hopefully somebody comes to his aid.

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  7. I cry everytime I hear that song. And then me and my friends take off our shirts and sing along. It's normal. Don't worry about it.

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