BenchMarks
November 19, 2004. It was just a regular-season game in Auburn Hills until a hard foul and a tossed cup of Diet Coke shattered the "unwritten wall" between the court and the stands. In an instant, a basketball game became a crime scene. In this deep-dive episode of BenchMarks, narrator Nick Morgasen deconstructs the night the NBA changed forever. We revisit the chaos: Ron Artest (now Metta Sandiford-Artest) charging into the crowd, Stephen Jackson’s haymakers, and the rain of debris that followed the Indiana Pacers into the locker room. But the real story lies in the ripples that followed. Morgasen investigates the massive institutional shift led by Commissioner David Stern. We examine how the "Malice" led to the NBA Dress Code, the banning of the "thug" narrative in sports media, and the total overhaul of arena security protocols. We look at the legacy of the "Fan Code of Conduct," the limit on alcohol sales, and the chilling precedent of lifetime bans for spectators. Beyond the 146 total games of suspension and millions in lost salary, this episode asks: Did the NBA actually become safer, or did it simply become "softer" to appease a terrified corporate audience? ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
26 episoder
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