Gilbert Arenas has had enough of the popular bench mobs that surround today's NBA game, as reserves often resort to sheer joy in order to remain engaged during their time on the sidelines.

The former Washington Wizards point man isn't having any of today's modern antics:

“Only thing that irritates the s*** out of me, is when someone scores and they're like shooting the arrows and they're having this big ol' hype party on the bench,” said Arenas on The No Chill Gil podcast. “F*** that … I want your position. I don't want you to do good.”

Arenas is in the very small percentile of former players who don't enjoy the joy and celebration that comes with today's game.

Somehow following his early-cut NBA career, the man known as “Agent Zero,” once symbolic with the fun of ill-advised long-range shots and post-bucket antics, is now the wet blanket version of an old NBA legend, yet lacking the accolades to make him one.

Teams like the Sacramento Kings have even dubbed their bench mob the “The Litty Committee” and are often seen cheering on the players who take the court:

https://twitter.com/SacramentoKings/status/1094739358211403776

Others remain unnamed, like the Brooklyn Nets' bench, not afraid to include a starter and All-Star in D'Angelo Russell in the shenanigans:

Gilbert Arenas' cutthroat mentality might seem fitting for a player of his stature, but he has hardly ever had to be the guy on the bench fighting for a spot.

“Hibachi” starred for Ulysses S. Grant High School in his native Los Angeles and went on to become a starter for the University of Arizona. Upon being drafted in the second round after two college seasons, he started 30 of 47 games as a rookie, but soon became the full-time starter in his second season and received the Most Improved Player award in 2003.