Each fishing season, a couple of hundred fishing vessels converge on The Bering Sea in pursuit of Alaskan king crab. A successful crab season can net a captain and his crew upwards of $1 Million. Such a bounty does not come without a price. Crab jockeys ride to work on multi-million dollar horses and toil in an environment where one navigational miscalculation or an unexpected temper tantrum from Mother Nature can claim a boat and her crew. It takes a special man to assume such responsibility for his crew and their collective safety and fiscal well being.
By all accounts, Derek Fisher would make a great fishing boat captain.
The Utah Jazz’s fishing season began this past summer when they swapped three worthless deckhands for Mr. Fisher. Even the most cynical Jazz fans were stunned at such a lopsided trade and more than a few attributed it to the possibility that Warrior GM Chris Mullin might once again be smuggling cases of Genesee Cream Ale into his office.
He is an illusion, an on court empty fishing boat. It is not obvious at first, but it is now undeniable. Like the gale winds of the
Poor defense is spit polished through the illusion of hustle and he has mastered the variable-ratio reinforcement schedule of passing in order to keep his teammates minimally satisfied. Naturally, the Jazz Chain of Command loves him. There was never a doubt about that.
The NBA season grinds on and my new favorite TV Show begins its third season in April. Just in time for the playoffs. It now seems inevitable that the Jazz will be playing a game at the same time as an airing of a new episode. Which Deadliest Catch do I watch? As Captain Phil of the vessel Cornelia Marie says, “I feel like a one legged man in an ass-kicking contest.”
Harpring Sucks.
1 comment:
Variable-ratio reinforcement schedule of passing?
I wonder if V-RRSoP will catch on.
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