Draymond Green Looked So Foolish After Insulting Charles Barkley
By Jimmy TrainaSports Illustrated
1. Here's what I wrote in Tuesday's Traina Thoughts:
"Rough news here via Sports Business Journal. Kenny Smith will be missing three upcoming installments of Inside theNBA on ESPN and Draymond Green will be filling in for him.
"We don't get episodes of Inside the NBA as frequently as we used to, so when it airs, we need the whole cast together. If Smith has to miss shows, though, why not just go with Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley and Shaquille O'Neal? Why does there have to be a fourth cast member? There is no need at all for Green to be shoehorned into the show."
It turns out Shaq was missing from Wednesday's Inside the NBA, not Smith, but that's irrelevant.
The point is that the people who run Inside the NBA still want to make Draymond Green a thing on the show. I went in depth about this with media reporter Richard Deitsch on this week's SI Media With Jimmy Traina.
I just don't understand the appeal of Green as an analyst. Yes, he's an NBA champion and was a big part of a legendary Warriors team.
Personally, though, I can't get past Green punching a teammate in the face and constantly acting like a jerk on and off the court. I don't understand rewarding him by putting him on the greatest sports television studio show of all time.
Ironically enough, I taped that podcast segment with Deitsch before Green's cringeworthy and disrespectful moment on Wednesday night.
The crew of Johnson, Barkley and Smith were discussing the future of the Warriors and what looks like the end of their memorable run with Steve Kerr, Stephen Curry and Green.
"Sports are for young people," Barkley said to Green. "You hope to have a great, long career, but nobody wins when they're 37, 38."
Green then fired back at Barkley by bringing up the end of Barkley's career, saying, "I think the goal is just to not look like you in a Houston Rockets uniform."
Things got a little tense on the 'Inside the NBA set when Draymond took a shot at Chuck's final years in Houston pic.twitter.com/g9xRH5H6qq
Now, I'm sure Green will come out today and say it was a joke, and I wouldn't be surprised if Barkley ends up defending Green by saying he loves Draymond and it was all in good fun, yada, yada, yada.
But here's what Green and Barkley and anyone else who watches the clip can't deny: Green's line about Barkley and the Rockets did not go over well at all with the panel. The silent reaction is all you need to know about how the rest of the cast felt about Green's shot at Barkley.
There's a term in pro wrestling called, "selling." When your opponent hits you with a chair, you have to sell it by acting like you're dead. When you're rival insults you, you have to sell it and act like you're devastated.
The Inside the NBA crew completely no-sold Green's line.
It was so obvious that Ernie, Kenny and Charles felt it was at best unfunny and at worst disrespectful and insulting.
But this is who Green is. You know the saying, "When someone shows you who they are, believe them?" No one should be surprised by Green's barb.
And viewers were not happy with Green going into Barkley's proverbial home and mocking the Hall of Famer.
Charles Barkley in his four seasons as a Houston Rocket: 16.5 points, 12.2 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 4.0 box plus/minus
Draymond Green's last four seasons: 8.6 points, 6.5 rebounds, 6.0 assists, 0.5 box plus/minus https://t.co/zJHYV5iO1h
Foolish to even debate/discuss Charles Barkley vs Draymond Green at any point in their careers. In a Rockets uniform, Barkley averaged 16/12/4 over 4 yrs.
You can have jokes about rings but Charles is an all-time great.
Today's generation of players only know Chuck as the funny guy who eats donuts on TNT. They have no idea how good he was.
Houston Barkley was a better player than peak Draymond. Chuck not letting him know that was a masterclass in grace and humility. pic.twitter.com/peqPO87416
I said this on Tuesday. I said it on the podcast. I do not understand on any level whatsoever why Inside the NBA needs Green on the show if someone is absent. There is not one single reason why the show couldn't have been Johnson, Smith and Barkley on Wednesday.
2. As I said above, this week's SI Media With Jimmy Traina features a conversation about all the latest sports media news with Richard Deitsch of Sports Business Journal and CBC Sports.
3. You know what's ironic about Chris "Mad Dog" Russo calling out Ben Stiller for blowing off Monday's Knicks game so he could attend the Met Gala? Russo did it on Stephen A. Smith's show. The same Smith who purports to be a huge Knicks fan yet blew off playoff games to attend WrestleMania and the White House Correspondents Dinner.
"The Mets are playing against the Rockies! Mendoza is on a freakin' life raft! And we have Lindor sitting here watching the Knick game…watch every pitch of your METS!" – Chris Russo pic.twitter.com/Hv8JnlNco0
4. There wasn't a second spitter during Wednesday's Mets game, but there was a second eater as SNY sideline reporter Steve Gelbs shared a massive hot dog with Keith Hernandez, who proclaimed, "It's kind of beefy" after his bite.
5. I still to this day remember being speechless the first time I walked into the old Yankee Stadium as a kid, so I felt this video of a young Cubs fan being told he was going to Wrigley Field for a game.
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7.RANDOM VIDEO OF THE DAY: I'll always have a soft spot for Ted Turner for two things he gave us: Braves games on TBS at 7:05 p.m. and WCW wrestling on Saturdays at 6:05.