As mouthpiece and elected president of the union representing rank-and-file police officers in New York City, Pat Lynch has made inflammatory rhetoric a cornerstone of his decade-long run as top man of the Patrolmen‘s Benevolent Association. Lynch’s made-for-TV venom is usually reserved for criminals who harm or kill cops and a justice system that sometimes fails to punish ’em fast enough and harsh enough to satisfy Lynch’s throw-away-the-key desires.

Lynch’s latest salvo however brings danger and shame to the 24-thousand members he represents. By explicitly blaming Mayor Bill de Blasio for the tragic ambush murders of two cops in Bed-Stuy a week ago Saturday, Lynch made a claim so vile and reckless, he makes himself and the PBA’s membership look irresponsibly desperate to gain leverage in the midst of stalled contract negotiations. Unless Lynch fully and quickly retracts his statement that the mayor has “blood on his hands” for the killings of two police officers, Lynch will be strapped with responsibility for a burdensome downward spiral in the NYPD’s credibility in some neighborhoods where its relationship is already in a delicate spot.

It was this fragile imbalance of policing power in poorer neighborhoods that was spotlighted by de Blasio during a campaign to fill an office that has for too long automatically genuflected to the NYPD. The current mayor was elected in part because of the hope that policing tactics deemed discriminatory and/or overly heavy handed or distrustful would be moderated and debated for their overall effectiveness.

When the Staten Island D-A failed to get an indictment in the Garner case, de Blasio couldn’t help but feel a connection with those upset and hurt by that outcome. De Blasio said something that in retrospect he may now regret. The mayor spoke about conversations with his son that spotlighted the plight of the black city dweller and interaction with the NYPD.

This infuriated Lynch. But instead of digesting the anecdote and considering whether the sentiment is worthy of analysis, the union boss sought to retaliate by making a huge fuss. Against the backdrop of contract negotiations with the city in stall mode, Lynch got macabre and urged the rank and file to sign a document that would bar the mayor from attending their funeral should they be killed in the line of duty. When officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were murdered just a week later, Lynch had stirred up sentiment such that cops turned their back on de Blasio when he turned up at the hospital where the policemen were rushed and pronounced dead.

A week after that – at the Ramos funeral – a sea of blue outside the church again turned their back on the mayor. This time, they did it in big numbers – in unison – turning 180-degrees away from a video screen projecting the television feed of the mayor as he offered a eulogy. This is Lynch’s doing. And it only worsens the environment Lynch’s own membership must work in. While it does convey a message of disapproval over de Blasio’s comment about distrust of police by people of color, it crosses the line of civility and inflames the broader tension connected to current events whether fully informed or not.

De Blasio has gone on about official business without revealing frustration over the simmering police hostility and stunning public displays of revolt. I believe the mayor knows he’ll prevail as public opinion moves in his favor and against the sophomoric strategy used by Lynch. A Times editorial in Tuesday’s newspaper was uncharacteristically harsh but on the mark with its assessment of the Lynch-led stunts meant to humiliate the mayor. It said in part: “With these acts of passive-aggressive contempt and self-pity, many New York police officers, led by their union, are squandering the department’s credibility, defacing its reputation, shredding its hard-earned respect. They have taken the most grave and solemn of civic moments – a funeral of a fallen colleague – and hijacked it for their own look-at-us gesture. In doing so, they also turned their backs on Mr. Ramos‘s widow and her two young sons, and others in that grief-struck family.”

This is not to say the mayor doesn’t deserve some heat from the police. He stubbornly defended overpaid staffer Rachel Noerdlinger despite her family’s toxic history of disrespect for law and order. There was the Dante comment post-Garner and then an aura of detachment when an element of the protest movement went overboard with anti-police chants and disobedience/aggression. But through it all, de Blasio has attempted to balance his views and policies on law enforcement’s role in the community. His commissioner Bill Bratton has done an exceptional job giving the citizenry space to react to the Garner injustice even when a Times Square action ended with fake blood splattered all over the commish. When De Blasio struggles to find words or proper tone during crises related to law enforcement, Bratton seems to know how and when to step in without undermining his boss.

If Lynch doesn’t retract his blood on hands statement and call for an end to the Blue’s back-turning before Liu’s funeral this Sunday, you’ll know he’s more concerned about a contract than the toxic city-wide dynamic he’s created with his rhetoric. Union bosses like Lynch don’t often retreat but if he doesn’t, his members ought to toss ’em aside before this gets much worse.

Chris Obekpa of St. John's goes in for the dunk against Long Beach State - 12-22-14

I got my first look at the St. John’s men’s basketball team Monday night and I wasn’t impressed. Ranked 17th nationally, the Johnnies beat Long Beach State by 17 at Carnesecca Arena. St. John’s played without one of their best players, Rysheed Jordan who was said to be out sick with the flu. When their other top player D’Angelo Harrison picked up his second foul just five minutes into the contest, the team’s lack of depth was obvious.

Without Harrison and Jordan, the Johnnies were rudder-less on offense. Harrison eventually returned and St. John’s righted the ship in the second half to blow out Beach but the Johnnies will struggle in Big East Conference play. I would say a Big Dance berth is no cinch despite their current lofty ranking.

St. John’s has no inside game other than what junior Chris Obekpa gives them when he darts in and out of the lane. Slimmed down and more polished offensively than last year, Obekpa (pictured above) is listed optimistically at 6-10. The fans call him “O-Block-Pa” because he has a knack for the blocked shot. Against Long Beach, Obekpa had sixteen points, eight rebounds and six blocked shots. He expends great effort. Problem is, there’s nobody really capable of spelling Obekpa when he gets into foul trouble or needs a breather. Johnnies coach Steve Lavin is trying to work in big guy Joey De La Rosa, a senior who transferred in from Florida International but Joey D doesn’t appear ready to contribute on the big stage. His little brother Adonis (me and Steelers fan Mike saw him play last spring for Christ the King) was supposed to give Lavin some minutes in the paint this season but hasn’t played because of some nebulously-explained eligibility quandary. On Monday night, Adonis was dressed. He participated in the warm-ups but looked out of shape. During timeout huddles featuring passionate instructions from Lavin to his team, Adonis could be seen trying to have conversations with people in the crowd.

This is not to say St. John’s isn’t stocked with talent on the wings. Harrison, Greene, Branch and Pointer are all playmakers and scorers but none of the four appear interested in playing around the hoop much. When the outside jump shot isn’t falling, St. John’s appears desperate – and the opposition knows what to do with Obekpa in those instances.

I bought a ticket on StubHub for just $6.25 (fees included) a few days before the game. Normally, you can’t find a seat at Carnesecca on the resale market much below face but there were scores of cheapies available for this one. Attendance was 5014. It was a quiet crowd.

The Long Beach State squad is in the middle of a non-conference slate of games that makes zero sense given their status as a mid-major. They played Texas in Austin on Saturday, came to New York for the Monday nighter against the Johnnies and then returned home to the west coast Tuesday. They fly back across the country this weekend to play Syracuse on Sunday and then go to Louisville next Tuesday before going back home again. While a program of its ilk wants to play big-name opponents, you can’t fly cross-country and back twice in the span of a week or so and explain it as rational to those at the school who believe student-athletes should get some kind of breather after final exams. A report in the San Diego Union-Tribune says Long Beach State coach Dan Monson aggressively schedules elite programs on the road because they’re known as “buy” games – and the newspaper says Monson gets a significant cut of the money obtained from his school’s participation in those contests. That this type of arrangement is allowed under NCAA rules is beyond me.