Untold: Shooting Guards review – a devastating tale of elite sport's ruthless cruelty
Elite sport has millions of stories about kids who didn't quite make it, but the bigger tragedy is the young adult who gets to the big leagues then throws it all away, because they can't cope with the life that success brings. It is peculiarly upsetting to watch from afar as a rare talent is undone by a personality flaw that has nothing to do with the game itself: this lad can do the difficult bit and get the ball in the net, but he can't withstand the pressure of the media's gaze, or the disappointment of sometimes not being picked? Can't someone please help him?
The reliable US documentary strand Untold has found numerous variations on this sad old story over the years, and it's turned up a devastating one in Shooting Guards, which tracks the parallel lives of basketball pros Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton. The film starts with Crittenton emerging from a 10-year stint in prison.
Advertisement
We flip back to the two men's childhoods, with Arenas growing up in the relaxed San Fernando Valley without his mother, while Crittenton is raised in 'the hood' in Atlanta without his father or any male mentors. Both excel at basketball in high school and college before suffering minor setbacks in the NBA draft, the annual ceremony where professional teams take turns to recruit a college player for next season's rosters. Arenas shines in the pre-draft showcase games, but then jokes to reporters that he wants to use his imminent star status to become 'an international pimp', a faux pas he thinks is the reason he ends up at the Golden State Warriors, not a more glamorous team. Crittenton desperately wants to play for the Atlanta Hawks so he won't have to leave his home town, but is overlooked by them and goes to the Los Angeles Lakers.
Neither player enjoys their first posting, with Crittenton becoming so homesick, isolated and depressed while stuck on the fringes of the Lakers team that he joins notorious LA street gang the Crips, mainly for the company. Both then move to the Washington Wizards, where Arenas is established as the team prankster by the time the nervous, defensive Crittenton arrives. When Crittenton wades into a minor argument about borrowed money on a flight home from an away fixture, Arenas spies a chance for a wind-up. This leads to the incident that will define their lives.
Shooting Guards – with eerie convenience, 'shooting guard' is the name of the basketball position that both men play – is all the more affecting for underlining just how trivial and silly the events of December 2009 are. Arenas is ruthless when he can get a rise out of a teammate, and eventually he goads Crittenton into threatening to shoot him. At the next training session, Arenas lays three guns from his own collection on Crittenton's chair as a gag, only to find that Crittenton has brought in a gun of his own. But apart from Crittenton alarming his teammates by throwing one of Arenas's firearms across the room – it doesn't go off – that's it. Shots are not fired. It is no more than two boys being stupid.
But the story gets out, with respected national media outlets adding entirely imaginary details to their versions. These young Black role models have, it is gravely announced, let everyone down. It is Arenas who exacerbates the controversy by aiming a finger-gun gesture at his teammates during a subsequent match, yet he and Crittenton are given the same draconian ban of 50 games. At the end of the suspension, Arenas returns, but the less-important player, Crittenton, is let go by the Wizards and is not picked up by any other team. His NBA dream is over.
Advertisement
Spiralling, Crittenton returns to Atlanta, where his visible wealth makes him a target. Having been robbed at gunpoint, he attempts to take revenge on the perpetrator some weeks later but accidentally shoots and kills an innocent bystander, 22-year-old mother of four Julian Jones, instead. In 2015, Crittenton pleads guilty to manslaughter.
The film is clear that the victims who matter most here are Jones and her family: director Walter Thompson-Hernández includes an interview with the young woman's mother, talking of how much she will always be missed. But it is impossible not to also feel sympathy for the haunted Crittenton, who was never equipped to deal with his own talent; or indeed Arenas, whose achievements in the NBA are now tainted with regret because he took a joke too far. Untold: Shooting Guards sensitively examines the ruthless cruelties of top-level sport, and a society where some lonely, angry young men seem born to lose – even if they really should be winners.
• Untold: Shooting Guards is on Netflix now
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
7 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Pacers fail to sweep Games 1 and 2 in a series for the first time in these playoffs
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — For the Indiana Pacers, a chance at being perfect in Games 1 and 2 of these playoffs went awry. They'll have to settle for a mere split of the opening two games in the NBA Finals instead. The Pacers' bid to become the fifth team in NBA history to go 8-0 to open the four playoff rounds — sweeping Games 1 and 2 in all four series — was stopped on Sunday night by the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder took control early and won Game 2 123-107, tying the championship matchup at a game apiece. The Pacers were trying to join the 1986 Boston Celtics, 1987 Los Angeles Lakers, 1996 Chicago Bulls and 2017 Golden State Warriors as teams that won Games 1 and 2 in all four rounds of a single postseason. All four went on to win the NBA title. Those teams all did it with home-court advantage in every one of those series. The Pacers haven't had home court since Round 1 — taking the first two of that series against Milwaukee, then winning the first two of Round 2 at Cleveland, the first two of the Eastern Conference final at New York, and Game 1 of the finals in Oklahoma City. So, in the end, the Pacers have to settle for going 7-1, tying for the fifth-best record in Games 1 and 2 in a single postseason. They also became the third team to win five of those games on the road in a playoff run. Houston went 5-3 in Games 1 and 2 on the road on its way to the title in 1995 and Miami went 5-3 in road games over the first two games of series in 2023 on its way to the NBA Finals. (The Heat were 6-2 in 'road' games in Games 1 and 2 of their series in the 2020 bubble playoffs as well, but those games were all in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.) 'I'm not interested in talking about the past,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'Each day, as you are on a playoff run, is like a new day. I find that looking back is a dangerous thing. We've got to keep our eye firmly where it needs to be.' If the Pacers had won Sunday, they likely would have been overwhelming favorites heading home with a 2-0 lead. Only two teams — the 1993 Chicago Bulls and 1995 Houston Rockets — won the first two games of a finals on the road, and both went on to win the NBA title in those seasons. And teams that open the finals with a 2-0 lead go on to win the series 86.5% of the time (32 times in 37 chances). ___ AP NBA:
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
NBA finals: Indiana Pacers stun Oklahoma City Thunder in final second to win Game 1 thriller
Nearly every analyst coming into this year's NBA finals had the Oklahoma City Thunder beating the Indiana Pacers comfortably. The first three quarters of Game 1 did very little to contradict those predictions until the final minutes, when all hell broke loose. The reigning NBA MVP, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, looked like, well, the NBA MVP for much of the game as he led the scoring with 38 points. His Thunder team went out to an early 7-0 lead and were 57-45 up by half-time. The second half seemed to be going the same way with the Thunder 15 points up at one point in the fourth quarter. Advertisement Schedule Best-of-seven-games series. All times US eastern time (EDT). Thu 5 Jun Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110 Sun 8 Jun Game 2: Pacers at Thunder, 8pm Wed 11 Jun Game 3: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm Fri 13 Jun Game 4: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm Mon 16 Jun Game 5: Pacers at Thunder, 8.30pm* Thu 19 Jun Game 6: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm* Sun 22 Jun Game 7: Pacers at Thunder, 8pm* *-if necessary How to watch In the US, all games will air on ABC. Streaming options include or the ABC app (with a participating TV provider login), as well as Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV, fuboTV, DIRECTV STREAM, and Sling TV (via ESPN3 for ABC games). NBA League Pass offers replays, but live finals games are subject to blackout restrictions in the US. Advertisement In the UK, the games will be available on TNT Sports and Discovery+. As for streaming, NBA League Pass will provide live and on-demand access to all Finals games without blackout restrictions. In Australia, the games will broadcast live on ESPN Australia. Kayo Sports and Foxtel Now will stream the games live, while NBA League Pass will offer live and on-demand access without blackout restrictions. And then the Pacers, as they so often have in these playoffs, started to fight back. With a minute remaining they had made it a one-point game at 110-109. With a second to go it was still 110-109 and Tyrese Haliburton had a chance to steal the game for the Pacers in outrageous fashion. Just as he had against the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, he did not miss when it mattered. His basket put the Pacers up 111-110 and won them the game. Remarkably, the Pacers led for just 0.3 seconds – the blink between Haliburton's shot and the buzzer. Haliburton's shot was the latest game-winner in an NBA finals contest since Michael Jordan's buzzer-beater to sink the Utah Jazz in 1997, also in Game 1. Advertisement 'We've just had to figure out how to win in so many ways all year,' said Haliburton. 'We're just a really resilient group, I'm just really proud of this group. We keep believing and we stay together. It ain't over 'til it's over.' Once again, Indiana had found a way back in these playoffs. On 29 April, they trailed Milwaukee 118-111 with 34.6 seconds left in overtime and won 119-118. On 6 May, the Pacers trailed Cleveland 119-112 with 48 seconds left and won 120-119. On 21 May, they trailed New York 121-112 with 51.1 seconds left in regulation and won 138-135 in overtime. Thursday's comeback was the Pacers' fifth from 15 or more points down this postseason, an NBA record. 'That's a really good team,' Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said. 'Credit them for not only tonight but their run. They've had so many games like that that have seemed improbable. And they just play with a great spirit and they keep coming. They keep playing.' The Pacers had staged the biggest fourth-quarter comeback in a finals game since Dallas came from 15 down to beat Miami in 2011. The coach of those Mavericks: Rick Carlisle. The coach of these Pacers: Rick Carlisle. His decisions on Thursday certainly helped. When the Pacers were 15 points down early in the fourth, Carlisle called time and subbed out all five players, seeking a spark. It worked. The Pacers outscored the Thunder 15-4 over the next 3:26 to make it 98-94 with a little over six minutes remaining. It was a foundation that would help them stage their remarkable comeback. Advertisement Haliburton's last-gasp heroics spoiled a brilliant outing by Gilgeous-Alexander, whose 38 points were the third-most in an NBA finals debut behind only Allen Iverson (48 in 2001) and George Mikan (42 in 1949). Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is on Sunday night in Oklahoma City. Both teams may just about have recovered by then. 'Man, basketball's fun,' Haliburton said, reflecting on the end of the game. It was hard to disagree.
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
NBA finals: Ruthless Thunder show Pacers no mercy as they level series 1-1
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was once again the best player on court. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was once again the best player on court. Photograph: Manuela Soldi/EPA The Oklahoma City Thunder blew Game 1 of the NBA finals after holding a significant lead over the Indiana Pacers. In Game 2, they made sure there was no repeat, utterly dominating their opponents in a 123-107 victory that leveled the series at 1-1. In Game 1, the Thunder had a 12-point lead at half-time and a 15-point lead in the fourth quarter before losing to the Pacers courtesy of a Tyrese Haliburton basket in the final second. On Sunday night, they took control of the game early on, but this time they didn't let go. Advertisement Both teams would have been aware Oklahoma City were the better team for most of Game 1, before Haliburton inspired a late, great charge. In Game 2, the Thunder were superior in every facet of the game for the entire contest. The Thunder's swarming defense gave the Pacers little time or space to shoot, while their offense kept the scoreboard ticking over. For the second game in a row, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was the game's top scorer, with 34 points, but also had excellent support off the bench notably from Alex Caruso and and Aaron Wiggins, who scored 20 and 18 points respectively. The best-of-seven series heads to Indiana for Game 3 on Wednesday night. Full report to follow …