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 Yi Jianlian The Follow Up
 


 
Jordan RivasWritten by: Jordan Rivas - Jordan started following the NBA early in his life and naturally his love, respect, and knowledge of the game began to grow exponentially. He mainly follows the pro game, but enjoys watching both (...) More  
 
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Yi Jianlian: The Follow Up

  By Jordan Rivas
07.18.2007 - Updated on 07.18.2007

A lot of the comments made on my article "Yi Jianlian and the Great Wall of Stupid" have been really great, and raised some good points, so I thought I should address a few of them.

First of all, let me explain the headline. I debated heavily whether or not to use the ’Great Wall’ line and did indeed consider the implications. The tactics being used by Yi’s camp have been used by players and pro clubs from countries all around the world, not just China. I have beef with this kind of thing all the time, no matter where it’s coming from. That being said, as some folks have been well reasoned enough to point out in the comments already, the Chinese government has a track record of exercising an usual amount of controller over their athletes. The ’Great Wall’ reference, is not just some cheap Chinese tie in, but an allusion to the type of restriction and limitation that the government there places on athletes. I meant no offense to anyone, but it’s only fair to mention the Chinese government and pro clubs have a reputation for this.

Secondly, many people have made mention of Yi’s right to choose what’s best for him, and made reference to this being a "free country". I fully acknowledge Yi’s right to make a choice in regards to his NBA career - he has the right to choose. My only beef with that argument is this: he already made his choice. He chose to enter the draft, no one forced him to do that. If he didn’t like the prospect or notion of being selected by a team with a less than ideal situation for him (be it due to the city or the roster), than he shouldn’t have entered the draft. If he wants to pick and choose the team he goes to, more power to him, he absolutely has that right, but he knowingly pursued that desire through the wrong avenue. If he wanted to have that kind of selection power, he should have opted for free agency. By entering the draft, he made his choice and agreed to follow the rules, he can’t then threaten not to play for a team before or after the draft - that undermines the entire process. And so yes, Yi has a right to choose, but he made his choice to enter the draft, full well knowing part of that process is out of his hands and the end result may not be ideal. Part of making decisions, and making your choices - the most important part, in fact - is making sure they’re well informed and being mature enough to deal with the outcome, no matter what it is.

Third, I fully acknowledge that the Milwaukee Bucks made a risky move when selecting Yi. They knew the situation, however unfair it was, and leapt into it anyway. I don’t like the ’I’m doing what I want because I can’ approach that Yi is taking, but Milwaukee took much the same approach by drafting Yi even knowing he didn’t want to play there. I’m not saying the Bucks are some higher moral ground, because they’re not, but they do have the rules on their side and are technically correct in expecting the player they drafted to play for them, even if they aren’t exactly playing nice either.

Fourth, I commend the commenter who pointed out Dan Fegan’s role in all this. I did make numerous mentions of the people surrounding and influencing Yi, but without clarification that made it sound as if I was purely addressing the Chinese constituency of Yi’s camp, which was not my intention. It deserves mention that Yi does have an American NBA agent, Dan Fegan, who represents players such as Shawn Marion, Jason Richardson, Jason Terry, and Stephen Jackson. And Fegan has been known to cause some controversy, and is a large part of why relations with the Bucks have been going so poorly. I’d like to thank the initial commenter and everyone else who brought him up for pointing out Fegan’s role in all this.

I’d like to thank everyone for their comments, in particular those members of the Chinese community who took the time to give us their insights. I just write the articles, you guys make it a discussion.

And lastly, no, I am not, nor have I ever been, a fan of the Milwaukee Bucks. I almost laughed at that one. Michael Redd is light out though, I’ll give you that much.

I’m out.

49 Comments: Yi Jianlian: The Follow Up

Posted by
King
on 07.19.2007
Did you hear the boooossss in the background when the Bucks drafted Yi. Hick town USA don’t want Yi there. I wonder if they did a poll of Buck fans what % really thought they like the draft pick. I will assume low. .
Posted by
chinese power man
on 07.19.2007
yi jian lian is noobs .
Posted by
King
on 07.19.2007
I don’t give a hoot about all this I just know 2 things. 1) I want to see Yi play. Clumsy Yao shouldn’t be the only chinese star in the NBA. 2) Yi should play anywhere any team. Though Yi’s camp has a point - Wild deer country isn’t really a good place for Yi to start.! Tough it out YI we love to see you PLAY BALL. BIG FAN!!! .
Posted by
Tian
on 07.18.2007
Hi, Jordan: Great article, could not agree more. I am so annoyed by Yi and people around him. He chose to enter the draft, then he need to follow the rule, period. When Yao entered the draft, the most ideal places he wanted to go is LA or NY, where has the largest Chinese population in the US. Prove yourself first, Yi, Bucks is not that bad for you to develop yourself. Our patience is running out. .
Posted by
hanny
on 07.18.2007
I like Yi, and aslso I wish Yi can go to Milwaukee Bucks and have a bright futrue there. Any controversy will have a result. .
Posted by
ζ―”η™½ζ›’ι»‘
on 07.18.2007
yi jian lian is so stupid .
Posted by
popz
on 07.18.2007
I honestly feel that Yi has no say in where he goes. It’s all dictated by his chinese handlers in the Chinese basketball association (CBA). Disobeying what they do could prove disastrous for his reputation in China (look at Wang Zhi Zhi), and furthermore, block the potential drafting of future Chinese players into the NBA by the CBA. I dont agree with what the CBA is doing by any means, but people are pointing their fingers at the wrong person. It shouldn’t be Yi, but the CBA. People talk as if Yi has a choice, and I’d just like to point out that he doesn’t. He’s a Chinese citizen and has no choice but to listen to the CBA. I’m sure he does not want to waste away in a basketball wasteland in China as opposed to joining the best basketball league in the world. If even Yao at this stage in his career is controlled by the CBA, how much more do you think it has over Yi? A still unproven player with much less clout in China and the U.S. .
Posted by
zhang chu
on 07.18.2007
hello ,i am a Chinese . if i was Yi i wil choose BUCK because it is a player’s resbonsibility .i think in the end Yi will stand at BUCK.a good player will nerver mind where he was play at. .
Posted by
george
on 07.18.2007
i believe that everyone has the right to join the draft and become a NBA player if he is talent enough.and meanwhile everyone has the right to quit and makes a better choice through negotiation and without violating the rules. furthermore he has the right to come back to the starting point and even back to where he is from. that’s his right .it’s arrogant and ridiculous to laugh at a player who hold up his own idea and make up his own mind.bucks have the right to choose Yi and make YI play for them .after all, the nba rules are rules. yi, however, can choose to play for anther team in a democratic and negotiable way. that’s his human right. .
Posted by
br
on 07.18.2007
ι€‰η§€ζ˜―εŒζ-Ήι’ηš „δΊ‹ζƒ...οΌŒηƒι˜Ÿζœ ‰ζƒι€‰ζ‹©ηƒε‘˜οΌŒη ƒε‘˜ζœ‰ζƒζ‹’ η»ηƒι˜Ÿγ€‚ζˆ‘ζƒ³ζ˜ “ζœ€η»ˆθΏ˜ζ˜―δ ΌšεŽ»BUCKS,εͺ是ζ -ΆζœΊζœͺ到 .
Posted by
Frank
on 07.18.2007
Jordan i’m not sure if this story about the guangdong tigers blocking yi is even accurate, according to a source on nbadraft.net, the story was fabricated and got "leaked". can you verify this? .
Posted by
Alfred
on 07.18.2007
come on Yi,enjoy your first NBA life,I think u’ll success in future not far! .
Posted by
Sad for all of sports
on 07.18.2007
The mystery poster who won’t put down a name is pathetic!! He is trying to call the system a slave system now!! How ridiculous is that when the NBA draft is a system that players enter of their own free will. Yi didn’t have to join the draft, but he freely chose to. This mystery poster just cannot accept that Yi and his camp are totally wrong and are an embaraasment to China as well as the US for acting like the worst spoiled brat in all of sports. Somehow I get the feeling that the NBA will be just fine without Yi. The strange thing is that Yao Ming gets openly chastised in front of the world for being tardy while Yi can refuse to even show up for his assignment in Milwaukee!! What a circus!! .
Posted by

on 07.18.2007
I don’t like to comment on these posts much. One reason being that most comment sections turn up being a mad internet melee of finger pointing. I would like to commend the writer who posted this (and also the previous) post[s]. I whole heartily agree with the points he laid out with the fiasco that is Yi. Although being Chinese myself...I didn’t appreciate the "Great Wall" part but I’ll let it slide this time. I’ve heard worst. I agree that the group young Yi has representing him has extremely poor taste in the handling of this situation. They are totally disregarding the reason a lottery was installed to pick young up-and coming players.I just have one thing to add. Preferring (yes..."PREFER") to go to a city that has a more established population of Chinese people is NOT racist. Especially seeing how Yi has spent the first 20 years of his life in Mainland China, it’s not surprising to see a young Chinese kid who wants to live/work in an area that’s more familiar with home. .
Posted by

on 07.18.2007
The Bucks drafted Yi despite his unwillingness to play. That’s not for the player, but for the money the player could bring. If they respected a player, they wouldn’t do that before even meeting him. The arrogance and stupidity of the Bucks totally screwed this up. They are just too deep in the money hole and they would do whatever they could. Unfortunately, the Bucks are not getting popularity in China, and their owner can kiss my balls if they want to make big money out of Yi from China. .
Posted by

on 07.18.2007
So, your whole point is... anyone making himself eligible for the NBA Draft should consider his future life and career permanently handed over to the NBA? Really? Please tell us you’re not really that stupid.If the NBA wanted to make the draft equivalent to a slavery system, they’d make that an explicit part of the eligibility contract. Guess what, it’s not. .
Posted by
M.R. in L.A
on 07.18.2007
If you would have just did it this way in the first place. The comments toward probably wouldn’t have been so negative. But you presented your case and are clearing the air. I can respect that also. .
Posted by
Bobby Lee
on 07.18.2007
I commend you as well Mr.Rivas. No hard feelings toward you at all! .
Posted by
R.E.S.P.E.C.T
on 07.18.2007
I respect that you came back to clear the air, it’s alot more clear where you were coming from now. Before you seem to take it to an extreme on some parts. But I respect your thoughts and commend you for taking your stance. .
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