Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Coincidence? Take a Closer Look

Brendan Haywood, at times this season, has been as dominating a center as we have had in some time. Averaging 9 points and 12 rebounds a game, he has been very active for the Wizards on defense and has been able to score in timely situations. With Etan out indefinitely, it seems rather timely that Brendan would step up and perform a little more to his potential. But wait...he played a lot better last year when Etan was hurt. In fact, after starting the first 20 games of the season, Etan got hurt and by the time Etan was ready to start practicing again, the Wizards were 8-1 with Haywood at center. He was averaging 9 points and 10 rebounds. Sound familiar? Don't get me wrong, I love the production we are getting from the center position right now, but it kind of sucks that Etan had to have open-heart surgery for Brendan to play well and with confidence. Why do I say that? Because I happen to know the history behind these two and I am in the unique position to shine some light on these facts.

Exhibit A

In the third grade, Etan Thomas comes home from school early. He was sent home by the school nurse for a case of rampant lice in his hair. He missed 2 weeks of school and was almost held back an entire year because his cursive writing skills were so far behind the rest of the class. That same week a young Brendan Haywood comes home all smiles--he got the lead in his class' school play, Gulliver's Travels. Sure, his height had a lot to do with that, as he was already 6'3" by the time he was wrapping up grade school, but it was the way he came out of nowhere to land the gig. The school drama teacher noted on his final report card that, "All year long, I wanted more out of Brendan. Even though the rest of the class is white, he still did not do enough to win the lead roles in 'Shaft', 'Malcom X', or 'Ali'. But for some reason, that one week for 'Gulliver's Travels'...he was really on."

Exhibit B

On the way to high school one morning, Etan was involved in a 5-car pile-up that resulted in severe casualties for him and those in his car. The freshman he was driving to school that morning was savagely sliced in half, while Etan suffered broken ribs, a broken leg, a concussion, and lost his right eye (which is of course why he has that glass eye to this very day). He was in a wheelchair for 2 weeks, and his high school sweetheart dumped him when his lack of depth perception (because of the glass eye) resulted in an unfortunate bedroom mishap. That very same month, an awkward Brendan Haywood, only 1 year younger than Etan, lost his virginity to the hottest girl in school. In a page torn out of that year's yearbook obtained by the Ahern Inquirer, a very telling note was penned from his classmate Todd "Whitey" Whittington: "Thank God you finally broke up with Patricia. Her moustache was scary, and her fake leg is not even the same length as her real leg. But nobody can take away that magical night with Amy "Booba" Lishus. How you pulled that off I will never know, but I can tell you this. You were in a kind of zone then that you have never seen since! P.S. Tough luck losing the leads in 'Ali', and 'Shaft' to me in grade school. You would have been great! (No way you could have touched Sean O'Flanagan's performance in 'Malcom X' though.)"

Exhibit C

Things were going great for Etan. He was big man on campus at Syracuse. Nobody ever would have seen this one coming: anal fissures. He missed the entire 2nd half of his sophomore year battling this dreaded condition. It was because of this that he changed his major from Molecular Biology to Poetry. It was also because of this that he had surgery on his anal sphincter muscle. And it was because of that he wrote the poem, 'Ode to a High Fiber Diet'. If you could possibly be more shocked, consider this: During that same semester, Brendan Haywood enjoyed unprecedented success as the elected representative for his dormitory floor. Among the many initiatives passed that semester was the "Flip-Flops Save Lives" shower slogan; the much heralded "Drop Your Nugget, and Watch Me Chug It" toilet billboard campaign to encourage flushing; and the now legendary "Have a porno, Leave a porno; Need a porno, take a porno" collection box (he got the idea at 7-Eleven.) A political science professor at UNC at the time commented, "Dorm politics has never been dominated like this before. This kid has come from out of nowhere to perform at an unbelievably high level. I can't explain it. Plus I think it is alarming that kids need to be 'encouraged' to flush more."

Exhibits D and E

The last two seasons Haywood has all of a sudden shown up to play when Etan was out of the picture. This is MEGA-troubling. If I was Etan Thomas, I would watch out for any mysteriously tall, bald, headband-wearing nurses in his hospital room. Especially one with a bad Muhammad Ali impersonation.

sugar

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Really smart guy? There's a hole in your theory as big as ebaggg's sphincter. Whats their record this year with Haywood doing so great? They just won thier second game. WOOHOO. Lets rejoice how great Haywood is making this team! Praise be to Haywood. The 2-5 team is so great with Haywood making 2-3 buckets a game and catching the rebounds that would otherwise hit him in the head.

Anonymous said...

makes sense you would leave your comment anonymously. the point is that Haywood is playing better. that is an undeniable fact. i merely gave you the reason why. you shouldn't be let out of the house without a helmet.

Anonymous said...

I understand your point. In your article, you brought up Haywood's play and how their record corresponded to it last year. Thats all well and good, but since your article is this year and your point is being made in reference to this year, then this year's record should be in the discussion and this year's record is putrid. I feel great about Haywood and his personal stats. It really feels good to know that he's warm and cozy inside. However, using your point about the Wizard's record with him playing so well does not bode well for this year, does it? That's my point. Maybe his play could translate into a few more wins so we can all feel as good as he does.

Joe

Anonymous said...

still haven't outsmarted the anonymous button? until you, there is no possible way you could understand this or any point. in fact, for your safety, i am putting a rubber ball on the end of my point so you won't hurt yourself. this was not an article about the wizards. it was an historical non-fiction documentary on 2 players and their crazily criss-crossed paths.

Anonymous said...

This was an abomination of all journalists out there. The real victims of the writer's strike is that we, the reader, are stuck with inferior writing like "sugar" pukes on to the page. And then to bash this reader who took time out of his busy schedule to rebuke the obvious deficiencies is just disappointing. I weep for the future.

Anonymous said...

Isn't "sugar" a stripper's name? Who names themselves "sugar" anyway?

Anonymous said...

clap
clap
clap

you did it. you are officially smart enough to write a comment on a website. now all you need is something good to say. baby steps.

00 said...

I like it Sugar. A little over the edge, but then again, so are you. I also take Joe's point: the Wizards stink. Maybe they stink despite Haywood's contributions, but they still stink.