The other day I saw a Twitter repost on my cousin’s story on Instagram:
“They let Magic Johnson play basketball with FULL
BLOWN HIV but won’t let Kyrie Irving play because he won’t get a COVID shot.” –
Laverne Spicer
Let’s break this down:
FACT: You cannot
transmit HIV through a cough or a sneeze.
FACT: HIV is
NOT an airborne virus.
FACT: HIV cannot
be passed person to person through breath.
FACT: COVID-19
is an airborne virus that can be transmitted through air vapors from person to
person.
FACT: A person with COVID-19 can infect someone else
through a cough or a sneeze.
This means that there was virtually no way that Magic
Johnson was going to infect anyone with HIV on the basketball court. The person
most at risk of a health concern was Magic Johnson himself, with his compromised
immune system.
Now let’s focus on the real issue here. Although I
disagree with his choice, I respect Kyrie Irving’s right to not want to get
vaccinated against COVID-19. But the
COVID virus, the vaccine and his rights and or choices are not the issue here.
The issue is that once again, Kyrie
Irving is not willing to do the job that he is paid millions of dollars to
do: play basketball! This is another
season of Kyrie Irving coming out to show us that he really doesn’t want to play
basketball anymore. It’s time that Kyrie just stopped playing the one game he
does engage in with his team, his coaches, the owners and the fans: pretending he still wants to play
professional basketball.
Last season he behaved like a fifth grader on a new
travel team. And that is a clear insult to fifth graders, because both of my
daughters played travel basketball in the fifth grade and they were never
allowed to just not show up at a game. He chose not to play a game last year,
and didn’t even call his coach. He informed his fellow players, but not his
coach. I’m sure the “Hey, don’t pass me the ball tonight, ‘cause…I won’t be
there,” might have felt like the responsible thing he could do for his teammates
at the time, but what grown-ass adult doesn’t tell their boss they’re not
showing up for work?
This came after a disappointing season with the Celtics
where he was unable to be a team player, both on and off the court. He walked
off the court before the game against the Milwaukee Bucks was officially over.
Before the season began he declined to be photographed for the cover of Sports
Illustrated with Gordon Hayward and Al Horford, citing his indifference to not
single out individual players as more important than the total team. Guess what
Kyrie, you managed to single yourself out on that one anyway.
So let’s not pretend this latest controversy is about
the COVID virus and his right to not get the shot. This is just another Kyrie
Irving tactic to draw attention to himself that he wants us to believe is about
something else other than what it is about. Even after his Instagram Live video,
where he stated that he does want to
continue to play basketball, I have my doubts. Outside of injuries – which he
has had many, as a lot of players do – Kyrie has still managed to make his time
off the court more memorable than his
time on the court. We don’t keep talking about the number of points Kyrie can
put up, or how many assists he racked up. His skills were once admirable, but his
spirit is what has waned. And unfortunately for Kyrie, he is less entertaining
and lovable as Kyrie being Kyrie, than Manny was being Manny.
If Kyrie wants to paint, or make music, climb Mount Everest,
learn carpentry, volunteer for a food pantry or Habitat for Humanity, or play
video games, sleep in late, travel the
world, or go work in a mine, coach, teach or anything else, then he should do so. Life is too short to be doing something
that doesn’t bring you joy. He should be man enough to stand up and say, “I
don’t want to do this anymore.”
I hope that Kyrie finds his way in one direction or
the other. I won’t fault him either way. When he was on the court and playing
as a team player, he was fun to watch. Now I would much rather say goodbye to Kyrie
and wish him well in his next endeavor than continue to be frustrated by his lack
of enthusiasm for the game he claims he wants to keep playing. His attitude is disappointing.
His refusal to play is irritating.