Friday, May 19, 2006

What's up with Nazi Mohammed?

Poring over sports news online during the past year, I've noticed something embarrassingly off-kilter. You see, there's a center for the Spurs whose name is Nazr Mohammed. He's been in the league since 1998, and he's a pretty reliable player. Thing is, for some reason, I kept seeing his first name misspelled as "Nazi," which, given his last name, brings up a lot of weird associations.

Last summer, Steve Kerr, Yahoo!'s basketball analyst, wrote this sentence:
I would expect Larry Brown to start Rasheed Wallace on the Spurs' superstar. Rasheed's length bothers Duncan, and putting Ben on Nazi Mohammed will allow him to do what he does best – roam and help from the weak side.
Then, this February, Kerr made the same mistake:
Nazi Mohammed and Steve Smith: Both players go from last place teams to potential championship-caliber teams (Mohammed to Spurs; Smith to Heat). As the teenage boy said in "Animal House" when a dancing girl flew into his bedroom, "Thank you God!"
Obviously these mistakes aren't intentional, and I don't think Kerr subconsciously equates Islam with National Socialism. One has to wonder, though. You'd think that after making this shorts-shittingly embarrassing faux pas once, Kerr would have learned his lesson.

Weirdly, though, this isn't a Freudian tic limited to Kerr. In an AP account of a game this March, Tim Booth wrote:
Earlier in the game, [Ray] Allen was kicked in the back by [Bruce] Bowen while the two were laying on the ground. Bowen was called for a technical, while Allen had to be restrained by Robert Swift and Nazi Mohammed.
I don't know what to make of all this except to say it's a little surprising. Everybody makes mistakes, but how do you write "Nazi" as someone's first name? Especially when his last name is Mohammed? Where is the copy desk?

9 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

hm methinks it was definitely intentional...someone trying to be contraversial.

like you said, how can one mistakingly write the word 'nazi' without doing a double-take? hmmm.

8:33 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think shoddy spell checking is to blame. Kerr probably hits "replace" over and over again and doesn't realize that Nazr is being replaced with Nazi.

3:15 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't think this is limited to writings -- the announcers regularly say his name as Nazi during games. However, they do not pronounce it the way it looks, Not-zee, but as Naa-zee. I think there may be more to this, i.e. perhaps it is a shortening or nickname for the more formal Nazr? I don't think the majority of the NBA press would be mispronouncing his name for so long, I mean they took the time to learn Tskishvilli already!

3:19 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

For what's it's worth, "Nazi" would be pronounced "nah-tsi". I don't think anyone's called Nazr and Nazi. Yet.

8:16 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You guys are retarded...How should Kerr have spelled it...NOZZI? give me a break. If I had no clue what the word Nazi meant, this wouldn't be an issue because that's simply what every fucking announcer calls him.

Idiots.

6:08 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i followed the kentucky wildcats regularly back when he was playing for them, and for what it's worth, the announcers (even then) pronounced his name naa-zee). this is just an example of a simple mistake. if anybody thinks that steve kerr has a hidden agenda that would explain his spelling it "nazi", i'd suggest you're functionally retarded.

9:18 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have a friend from Kentucky (where Mohammed played college ball) and his name is pronounced Nah-zee - see first part of personal section http://www.nba.com/playerfile/nazr_mohammed/bio.html
That would explain the confusion on spelling.

9:19 AM  
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6:47 PM  
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3:00 AM  

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