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If the refs are going to start calling techs for any kind of complaining, maybe they should start doing a better job of calling fouls....
Welcome to David Stern's NBA;
Players looking too "ghetto" for your sensitive honkey eyes?
Embrace the culture and diversity? Play up on the hipness of the latest youth fashion? Nope: Pass a rule requiring players to dress white(r).
Players complain too much about calls, especially non-(annointed)-stars?
Improve the reffing core? Increase training? Decrease fraud and corruption? Nope: Pass a rule punishing players for not meekly accepting whatever good and bad is offerered up by the now discredited, post Donaghy, zebras.
The NBA - it's FANtastic!
Welcome to David Stern's NBA;
Players looking too "ghetto" for your sensitive honkey eyes?
Embrace the culture and diversity? Play up on the hipness of the latest youth fashion? Nope: Pass a rule requiring players to dress white(r).
Players complain too much about calls, especially non-(annointed)-stars?
Improve the reffing core? Increase training? Decrease fraud and corruption? Nope: Pass a rule punishing players for not meekly accepting whatever good and bad is offerered up by the now discredited, post Donaghy, zebras.
The NBA - it's FANtastic!
To those who say the players should be allowed to express themselves in tense situations, I say, "Tough." Lots of people have jobs that have tense situations where if shit goes wrong they have to keep things bottled up. If a nurse hands a surgeon the wrong scalpel, is it ok for him to jump back and yell, "What the fuck?" at the nurse? If an actor fucks up his line in the middle of a major performance, should an actress shout, "You dumbass!"?
.
It may not be right, but doctors do it all the time. But I get your point.
Every single one.I think the new rule on complaints sucks, and was put into place to protect the refs from being exposed when they (frequently) make bad calls.
I wonder how many games Rasheed would be tossed from this year, if he were still playing?
Go Blazers
This is professional sports. Anyone who's ever played sports knows the amount of emotion that goes into competing hard, and that is greatly multiplied when you're playing in front of 20,000 people in the playoffs. Comparing that to a nurse handing a doctor the wrong scalpel is ridiculous...
I'm all for decreasing the amount of complaining, but the techs I saw last night were a joke. When you're caught up in the game and a bad call goes against you it's just natural to have a small reaction. It's called human nature. Armon raised his hands and immediately put one down as if to say 'it's on me'. To T a guy up for that is bullshit. He was letting it go, he didn't make a big scene, it was the ref who made it a bigger deal that it was.
It may not be right, but doctors do it all the time. But I get your point.

I noticed two instances where a demonstration T stopped a potentially good play by the other team. My immediate thought was that, lets say near the end of a close game, a player drives to the basket but is rejected, and the other team takes off on a fast break. Simply take a demonstration T immediately, claiming you were fouled, to stop the break. Hell, I'd instruct my players to do just that as a contingency play in the time out. Yes I know it costs the player $2000 (the equivalent of 25 cents to me). I'd find a way for the team to pay it. It's worth it.What both ironic and stupid about the whole thing is that supposedly the fans wanted this change and I while I agree the complaining was out of control at times the constant T's are even more annoying and the way it kills the flow of the game is horrible. By "eliminating" one problem they mave created a new on the is even worse.
Although as a Blazers fan I didnt mind the TV announcers pointed out the one of the T's the Blazers got the other night killed a fast break advantage the Clippers had. Not cool when that happens to us.
What both ironic and stupid about the whole thing is that supposedly the fans wanted this change and I while I agree the complaining was out of control at times the constant T's are even more annoying and the way it kills the flow of the game is horrible. By "eliminating" one problem they mave created a new on the is even worse.
I noticed two instances where a demonstration T stopped a potentially good play by the other team. My immediate thought was that, lets say near the end of a close game, a player drives to the basket but is rejected, and the other team takes off on a fast break. Simply take a demonstration T immediately, claiming you were fouled, to stop the break. Hell, I'd instruct my players to do just that as a contingency play in the time out. Yes I know it costs the player $2000 (the equivalent of 25 cents to me). I'd find a way for the team to pay it. It's worth it.
They already can do that by drawing an intentional foul. I guess your point is that it's a way to circumvent the clear path rule. But if you realize your team is about to get dunked on and it's too late to commit normal foul without risking a clear path violation, is it really a good gamble to draw a tech? I mean, by that point the guy with the ball is at half court and the ref might just wait a half second before blowing the whistle.
Besides, it's probably debatable whether it's more desirable to have an uncontested layup or 1 point and possession of the ball. Does the defense really gain much advantage by committing the tech? You send a 90% free throw shooter to the line, and you probably concede about 1 point per possession anyway, so it's pretty marginal. Giving up around 1.8 points per tech anyway (more against more efficient offensive teams). And there's always a chance the opponent buries a three pointer in the ensuing possession, so the tech in that instance costs you 4 points instead of the layup's 2, which can be a big drain on team momentum.
I noticed two instances where a demonstration T stopped a potentially good play by the other team. My immediate thought was that, lets say near the end of a close game, a player drives to the basket but is rejected, and the other team takes off on a fast break. Simply take a demonstration T immediately, claiming you were fouled, to stop the break. Hell, I'd instruct my players to do just that as a contingency play in the time out. Yes I know it costs the player $2000 (the equivalent of 25 cents to me). I'd find a way for the team to pay it. It's worth it.
There needs to be a compromise.
If they consistently apply the rule players will adjust, there'll be fewer T's, and we'll also get less whining.
If anyone caught the Utah/Phoenix game last night, did you happen to see Al Jefferson raise both arms in protest over a call, and keep them up for about 6-7 seconds while looking at the ref, and not get a technical (like Armon). Or did you see Deron Williams slap his wrist three times while looking at the ref because he thought he was fouled and not get called for a technical, like the Blazers did?
It's a total joke.
Williams already had gotten a technical earlier, so the refs didn't want to throw him out of the game. Williams complains a lot so this rule will effect him.
Williams already had gotten a technical earlier, so the refs didn't want to throw him out of the game. Williams complains a lot so this rule will effect him.
