Well, the Heels have been losing a bit more than usual, and for the life of him Roy just cannnot figure out what the hell is going on. Whatever it is, he knows it’s bad, though.
Maybe you have your own, perfectly valid reasons for hating Roy Williams (especially if you’re a Duke or Kansas alum). But this isn’t worth getting upset about.
Look, in your own life, you’ve undoubtedly experienced misery of one kind or another. But if you’d just lost your job or had just gotten divorced, would “perspective” REALLY make you feel any better? Has any unemployed person EVER felt better after being reminded, “Some people have terminal cancer, so what you’re going through is really nothing”? Has any depressed, heartbroken divorcee ever cheered up after hearing “Some people are starving in Africa, so really, what are YOU complaining about”?
OBVIOUSLY, Roy Williams isn’t suffering the way Haitian earthquake victims are. He knows that as well as anyone. But our pains and problems are our pains and problems. They don’t vanish just because there are other people whose problems are far worse.
Whatever. I certainly wouldn’t compare my plight to that of the people of Haiti at a freakin’ press conference. Just because you have a thought doesn’t mean you have to vocalize it.
I’d say his major problems are a lack of empathy and no governor on his motor mouth.
No, he compared losing basketball games to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people, countless others injured or orphaned or left homeless, when he could have just shut he fuck up.
There was no “lip service,” as if that even applies here. *He *brought the topic up.
Of course, if he wants the world to know the inane rambling self-centered conversations he has with his massage therapist, all the while dismissing a tragedy of truly massive proportions, he was absolutely spot on.
If you are confused what I meant by perspective, I will gladly enlighten you. I feel uncompelled to compose an OP that accounts for all the meanings of the words included, along with their variants. Seems a bit unwieldly.
If you are going to look up words, I would suggest “comparison.”
He made no comparison between losing games and the deaths in Haiti.
He said losing games felt like a catastrophe to him, in the same sense that he might have said losing games felt like the apocalypse to him. He never compared anything to Haiti.
His massage therapist did. You read the quote, right?
Again, his massage therapist made the comparison, and he responded to it. You folks sure can twist yourself into knots defending what is essentially an indefensible statement. The simple fact of the matter is that the therapist defined “catastrophe” by citing what happened in Haiti. He then used the same word to describe losing basketball games.
Exactly right- Roy Williams didn’t compare his situation to that of Haiti. His massage therapist did.
The massage therapist tried, as many well-meaning people do, to make light of somebody else’s problems by pointing to people who are MUCH worse off.
That rarely helps ANYBODY.
When everything is going to Hell in your own life, it’s small (or no) comfort to hear anyone telling you how (relatively) blessed you are, even if it’s true.
I’m willing to bet that, if you’d had a lousy week at work, and some perky optimist told you, “Cheer up, at least you have it better than Somalian refugees," you wouldn’t smile and say, “Gee, you’re right! I’m a lucky guy, when you think about it.” You’d probably tell her, “Shut the hell up. What does that have to do with anything?”
That wouldn’t indicate a lack of compassion for Somalians, just a recognition that other peoples’ grave problems don’t do anything to diminish your own lesser problems.
If I’m reading the quote right, no he didn’t. First, Tar Heel Guy said that the losingness was a catastrophe. Then his Massage Therapist said ‘No it’s not, Haiti is a catastrophe.’. Then THG said, “It’s a catastrophe to me, because it is my life.”
That’s damning with faint praise at best. And it still offers no justification for his callous and self-centered remark at a press conference.
Feel free to force your definitions of *perspective *on the conversation. Just understand that they are not mine. The perspective Roy needs is the one required to understand that there are much greater troubles in the world than his coaching record.
Funny. Youse a real humanitarian, youse is. But a lexicographer? No so much.
I assume this is intended as an insult. Duly noted.
Well. you’re wrong about that. I wouldn’t say anything like that. And I certainly wouldn’t say that from my perspective I was in the same situation as a Somalian refugee.
Just because the massage therapist had referred to Haiti as a catastrophe does not mean that for the remainder of the conversation the word catastrophe was redefined to mean “Haiti”.
It seems as though you are trying to read his words in the worst possible light because you dislike the guy.
Don’t worry about it though, it’s not the end of the world.
And of course, if Roy Williams HAD told the press, “Sure, we’ll probably miss the NCAA tournament this year, but compared to the agony suffered by people in Haiti, our problems are really pretty insignificant,” NOBODY would have said, “That’s a good point.” Williams would have been ridiculed by fans and the media for making lame excuses.
Former Buffalo Bills coach Marv Levy was once asked if an upcoming game was a “must-win”. Levy answered, “No, World War II was a must-win. This’ll just be a football game.”