Friday, November 02, 2007

A Tale of Two Stars

In the last week or so, two sports superstars made headlines from opposite ends of the contract negotiation spectrum. Not only was each case different in how the contract was handled, but it also showed how each decision impacted their respective team and sport. The stars I speak of are Tim Duncan and Alex Rodríguez. And if you delve deeper into each instance, you'll notice a stark difference between the apparent selfishness of the two and how that selfishness has taken one to sports championship immortality and the other still waiting for his first shot at a championship.

The Rodríguez story started the night the Boston Red Sox clinched their second World Series championship in three years. During the telecast of the Series' game four, the sportcasters and sports reporters broke the news that Alex Rodríguez would opt out of his contract with the New York Yankees, thus setting him onto the free agent market. What he and his agent, Scott Boras, did was step into the limelight that should have been strictly for yet another historic Red Sox playoff run.

But we all know that this is nothing new with Rodríguez and Boras. They seem to make every contractual agreement about them and how much money Alex (Scott) will garner. Who can blame them really? They're really good at what they do and we're here along for the ride. Some poor sap of a MLB franchise that will pay through the nose to have Rodríguez play on their team. Alex will continue to hit like none before him has, yet will he and his team be around come World Series time? Who knows. Whatever team picks him up may not have enough money to field a decent team anyway because Rodríguez will demand an astronomical amount of cash to fulfill his (Boras') need.

And then there's Tim Duncan. Selfish, Tim Duncan that is. Yes, he is selfish. Even Tim has caught the selfish bug, where it's all about "me, me, me." However, it's not about how much endorsement money he needs to make. Or about how many times he's on the highlight reel each night. Or even about how many shots he needs to take. For Tim Duncan, it's about winning. He took an apparent pay cut when he signed his contract extention this week so that it will pave the way to re-sign Manu Ginobili and even another top free agent down the line. What all this means is that he has set up himself and his teammates for more years of championship runs. This the good kind of selfish that the NBA needs, and the sports world for that matter.

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