Natebishop3
Don't tread on me!
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2008
- Messages
- 94,246
- Likes
- 57,515
- Points
- 113
http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/...ns-serving-keynote-speaker-harvard-university
CEO doesn't apply. Paul Allen owns the Trail Blazers. There is no board of directors. He isn't the CEO. He's the owner. The sole owner of the team.
When we refer to Paul or Mark Cuban as the "owner" of the team, nobody is implying that he owns the players. He owns the organization. The players are not property. They can quit basketball and leave whenever they like. They do, however, have contracts for exclusive rights to play for their team, but they signed those contracts of their own free will.
Just another example of making a big deal about the use of a word in the fight for political correctness.
"I'll use my owner, for an example. Once again, 'my owner.' Think about it," Green said. "The owner of our team, who I have a very close relationship with. If Peter Guber and Joe Lacob walk in, I'm going to say, 'Hey, here's my owner Joe Lacob; here's my owner Peter Guber.' [general manager] Bob [Myers] is going to say, 'Hey, here's my owner Joe Lacob.'
"But think about that. 'Here's my owner.' Do they really own you, the person? ... If I walk in and say I'm the owner of the Golden State Warriors and you think Steph Curry, it's a backwards thing."
Green said people referred to Steve Jobs as the CEO of Apple, not the owner.
"But when it gets to sports, it's, 'Hey, there's the owner,'" Green said.
CEO doesn't apply. Paul Allen owns the Trail Blazers. There is no board of directors. He isn't the CEO. He's the owner. The sole owner of the team.
When we refer to Paul or Mark Cuban as the "owner" of the team, nobody is implying that he owns the players. He owns the organization. The players are not property. They can quit basketball and leave whenever they like. They do, however, have contracts for exclusive rights to play for their team, but they signed those contracts of their own free will.
Just another example of making a big deal about the use of a word in the fight for political correctness.


