Kyrie Irving’s ‘I do not talk to pawns’ response to media is unnecessary

There are much better ways to do this.

Welp. The latest Kyrie Irving drama in Brooklyn continues and they haven’t even dribbled a single basketball yet.

Last week, during the Nets’ media week, Irving left a statement with a team spokesperson revealing that he wouldn’t be speaking with the media and would, instead, “let my work on and off the court speak for itself.”

Of course, that’s a violation of the league’s media protocols and it resulted in a fine of $25,000 that the league hit him with on Thursdsay.

He certainly wasn’t going to let that go unchecked. On Friday, Irving issued a response via his Instagram. He started off with a Malcolm X quote and said he was for peace, love and greatness. He also said he hopes his fine money goes to helping marginalized communities.

Then he said “I do not talk to pawns.” Sheesh. Here’s a look.

I pray we utilize the “fine money” for the marginalized communities in need, especially seeing where our world is presently. (I am) I am here for peace, love and greatness. So stop distracting me and my team, and appreciate the art. We move different over here. I do not talk to pawns. My attention is worth more.” 

Whew, man. That is a whole lot. First, he says he’s for peace and love. Then he’s calling people pawns. That, right there, is a journey in itself.

Look, it’s easy to understand why Kyrie Irving wouldn’t want to speak with the media. He was labeled a disruptor and an agitator for questioning the NBA’s motives for returning and suggesting his fellow players should skip the bubble and commit their time to fight for change after police officers killed of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

He wasn’t wrong for his questions there and wasn’t wrong for his suggestions. Yet, he was labeled as a villain. And he has the right to be upset about that.

If he doesn’t want to talk to the media, fine. Don’t! He can just pull a Marshawn Lynch and say he’s just there so he won’t get fined. He can give them terrible answers. He can actively evade questions. There are ways to do this without the needless drama.

What he’s doing right now is only adding on to the story. The only one “distracting” him and his team is Irving himself.

[jwplayer gGabj0xN-q2aasYxh]

NBA fans are speculating on Adrian Wojnarowski’s future at ESPN after he deleted his Twitter bio

This is probably much about nothing.

Adrian Wojnarowksi has been in the spotlight over the last month or so, but not because of any NBA news he reported.

In early July, Wojnarowski fired off a private e-mail to U.S. Senator Josh Hawley with a curt statement containing an expletive in it after the senator wrote a letter to the NBA with various complaints.

Hawley leaked the e-mail, and it spiraled into a huge mess on the internet.  Everyone defended Woj, but the end result was still a suspension.

That’s why NBA fans everywhere were speculating about Wojnarowski’s future with the company after, apparently, the reporter removed “ESPN Senior NBA Insider” from his bio.

It’s just a blank space now. And so NBA fans took liberty in filling it.

But that’s all just speculation. The reality is this is probably much to do about nothing at all.

He’s still got his ESPN title in his background plus an ESPN URL as his profile link. If he was leaving or on the outs with the company, this probably wouldn’t be the case. If anyone could host an independent operation in sports media, it’s Woj. But that’s probably not what this is.

Don’t expect him to leave anytime soon. Or, maybe more appropriately, don’t expect ESPN to just let him walk out that door so quickly.