I don't know that I am a smarty pants, but I've NEVER put Roy on a pedestal. Of course he's just another jock... he's a professional basketball player who's spent innumerable hours shooting and dribbling a basketball... he isn't some sort of philosopher-king who spends time in reflection on how best to serve the people of the Pacific Northwest.
Oh no?
But he could.
Not that he should. But he could.
Part of the job description of being a "max player", a "franchise player" is to be a team leader, team builder, community leader, charity leader, public speaker, face of the team, face of the city/region.
Much of this is unwritten. Some of it is actually in the dang contracts. It is difficult to enforce, and many of the would-be "franchise players" perform poorly in these capacities. Kinda like how some players get their big payday and mail it in. Of course, teams do their part to diminish these concepts by trading their "franchise players". Only a few achieve greatness in these areas as well as on the court.
Roy is/was well on his way to cementing his place as one of the premier franchise players in the NBA. On and off the court. And, I guess that my disappointment was that he was off to such a good start, that he has a chance at being one of the all-time greats.
He WILL NOT BE if he puts himself above the team, if he doesn't work with the Blazers so that they can figure out how to pay people, and at the same time keep people, if he spouts horseshit like "I can't recruit if I don't know if I will be here".
Looking at the big picture, a star athlete strives for a very long time against a riptide to achieve that monster contract. It may be the only one they ever achieve. By the time they are in those negotiations the thought to get as much guaranteed money as you possibly can out of that one deal - all other factors ignored - must be overwhelming.
I would likely want that too. Who knows, maybe he is more worried about his knees than we know. He lives with the pain, and maybe it is a daily reminder to him. I don't think Roy is bad for wanting what a normal person would want in that situation.
But, if you strive for true greatness, you don't do the normal thing.
And the funny thing is, sometimes (no guarantees) it works out MUCH better in the longer run.
If Roy maintains a true golden image, fosters team building, which allows a better roster, which leads more winning, which makes Roy more popular, he could make much more money, then if he just played hard, kept to himself, and ordered his agent to play hardball at contract time. Winning is the biggest money producer of all.
And in the even longer term, what if politics, big business or NBA management is in his future? Team building and leadership. That will play better down the line then, "I don't know if I should represent the interests of the voters. I am a lame duck and I am down in the polls. I think it is 50/50 I will even be governor next year."
Sorry smarty pants, er, EdO, I do think this stuff matters.
But nevermind. So Roy isn't the second coming. He still kicks ass on the court. Right?