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Nader makes the call

Posted by Eric Wilbur, Boston.com Staff June 12, 2008 06:56 AM

Look, my presidential vote is still up for the taking, but if you want to end the human injustice of the world that is NBA officiating, well then Ralph Nader is your man.

I received the following e-mail from The Nader Team yesterday in which the candidate’s supporters briefly raise such menial issues as gas prices, health care, and that war thing before getting to the true issue splitting our society today: Dirty NBA refs.

Want to support a Presidential candidate who calls it as he sees it, without fear or favor?

Just look at today's headlines, and you'll see that Nader was the early warning system.

From food safety (bad tomatoes), to cracking down on corporate crime (sub-prime meltdown), to the oil industry ($4 a gallon), to health insurance (42 percent of adult Americans now underinsured or uninsured), to the corporate control of the two major political parties (corporate contributions to the Democratic Party convention in Denver), to the war in Iraq, to the NBA playoffs.

The NBA playoffs?

Yes, even when it comes to the NBA playoffs, Ralph was right.

And he was right early.

Back in 2002, Ralph was sitting at home watching game six of the NBA playoff game between the big TV market Los Angeles Lakers and the small TV market Sacramento Kings.

The Kings were up three games to two.

One win and the Kings would move on.

Shaq and Kobe and the Lakers would be out.

In that crucial game six in Los Angeles, the referees called foul after foul against the Kings.

But when Kobe Bryant elbowed Mike Bibby's nose, sending Bibby to the sideline bleeding, no foul was called.

It was that bad.

As the Washington Post's Michael Wilbon put it at the time "I have never seen officiating in a game of consequence as bad as that in Game 6."

The Lakers shot 40 free throws in that Game 6 - 27 in the fourth quarter - "won" the game 106-102, eliminated the Kings, and went on to beat the Nets for their third straight NBA Championship.

Ralph Nader saw injustice and on June 4, 2002, Ralph wrote to NBA Commissioner David Stern asking for an investigation.

Ralph personally spoke with Stern.

But Stern stiffed Ralph.

No action was taken.

Yesterday, former NBA referee Tom Donaghy, now convicted of conspiring with gamblers, was pointing fingers at his colleagues.

Donaghy's lawyer, John Lauro, says NBA executives directed referees "to manipulate games" in order to "boost ticket sales and television ratings."

According to Lauro, in the crucial 2002 Lakers/Kings game that Ralph complained to Stern about - "Tim learned from Referee A that Referees A and F wanted to extend the series to seven games.

Tim knew Referees A and F to be 'company men,' always acting in the interest of the NBA, and that night, it was in the NBA's interest to add another game to the series."

We tell our kids that sports teaches lessons about life.

The lesson we learned from the 2002 NBA Playoffs - Ralph was right.

The Nader/Gonzalez platform of truth, justice and challenging the abuse of power deserves a hearing in this crucial election year.

From the NBA to the Congress to the White House to K Street.

Time to give America a choice for an independent voice.

Sold. What’s the price of oil and ending a war when we’ve got a guy who’s not afraid to fight the NBA? Finally, somebody has priorities in order.

1 comments so far...
  1. I wonder why the national media isn't making this into the issue it deserves to be especially in light of how much mileage they got from "spygate". Sure, Donaghy isn't the most reputable guy but neither was Matt Walsh and look how much credibility he was extended because the media had an agenda. Look at the officiating in the 2002 series and how can anyone believe that it doesn't merit a much close examination?

    BTW Eric, it is not the job of the government (aka Super Nanny in the mind of liberals) to adjust oil prices, provide health insurance or infinge upon our rights to a free press. We are 40 years into Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty and trillions of dollars later government can't solve it. But maybe they can do something about sports since they cannot help but screw up everything else.

    Posted by rob June 12, 08 09:51 AM
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