Lowell Cohn: What's the difference between 49ers owner Jed York, Warriors owner Joe Lacob?

Is Joe Lacob a better guy than Jed York?

Opinion writers — people like me — generally believe Lacob is the better man, the morally superior man. This assumption informs much of my writing, much of Bay Area sports writing. But is it correct?

Or, to be blunt, am I all wet and are my colleagues all wet?

I’ll stick with me. I understand me better than writers who are not me. I’ve written reams about York and Lacob, more on York lately because of questionable, outrageous, morally gray things he’s done in the past six or so months. Lacob did his questionable, outrageous, morally gray things before that.

What are those things?

As you know, York or someone very close to York told the national media Jim Harbaugh was a goner, would be out after the just-completed season. York or someone very close to York floated these notions before the season began. Harbaugh sure was out. I wrote the leaking was unfair and shady in an ethical sense. It was. I wrote it hurt the season — it did — and made Jed look bad.

I still believe all that.

It’s just that Lacob did the same stuff — at least, some of the same stuff. And he got away with it — no scars, no biting satire directed his way, no nothing.

Sometime in the Warriors’ 2013-2014 season, everyone started hearing the rumors. Coach Mark Jackson would be gone at season’s end. I sat in many Jackson news conferences, even during the playoffs, where the main topic was him — his future, his impending demise as coach and how he felt about it. He was a man under interrogation.

I have to assume Lacob or someone very close to Lacob was talking too much, talking out of turn — being unprofessional in the Jed York sense.

After last season, Lacob fired Jackson, fired him fast. So, all the rumors were true. Jackson had been a good coach, resurrected the franchise — just like Harbaugh did in Santa Clara. And he made the Warriors into winners. The players liked Jackson and many thought the firing unfair. From a win-and-loss perspective, the firing almost certainly was unfair.

Which means Lacob and York acted in eerily similar ways, regrettable ways. And it was all unnecessary. Both ownerships could have kept quiet, done things with grace, and acted at the appropriate time when the season was over. But York gets the heat, and Lacob is smelling like a rose?

Why the difference?

Now things get interesting.

Writers prefer Lacob to York. I’m not so sure about fans. They did boo Lacob that time at Oracle Arena.

Lacob is always around. He’s at the arena before and after games, and you can talk to him and joke with him and argue with him. York generally is in hiding. Sometimes, I think he’s a hologram.

So, writers are more familiar with Lacob.

Lacob is a self-made man. He started from nothing and made himself a financial wizard and outbid Larry Ellison for the Warriors. He’s what you’d call a scrapper. He’s one of us.

York most definitely is not one of us. He was born rich. He had things handed to him before he was ready — like ownership of the 49ers. He oozes privilege and the easy life. Many fans resent his upbringing — I hear from them all the time. When he talks to the media, he seems to doubletalk. You’re not sure if he’s being straight with you. Lacob, he’s a straight shooter.