Official NBA 2016-2017 Thread - 30 teams, 1 goal. 2 weeks left, so much can happen!!

Rockets' Ariza waits outside locker room to confront Mavs' Mejri after testy game





DALLAS -- An ugly scene developed after Houston's 123-107 victory over Dallas on Tuesday night when Rockets forward Trevor Ariza waited outside the Mavericks' locker room to confront center Salah Mejri.

According to a source, Mejri made a derogatory comment to Ariza about Ariza's wife and children between the third and fourth quarters.

Ariza became so upset that he exchanged words with Mejri, which prompted the referees to give Ariza a technical, his second of the game, leading to an ejection.

After the game, Ariza dressed and walked toward the Dallas locker room, accompanied by two security guards. As Ariza and several Houston teammates -- including Patrick Beverley, James Harden and Eric Gordon -- waited for Mejri, Dallas police officers already outside the locker room as part of their regular detail monitored the situation to make sure it did not escalate.

At one point, Mavericks guard Deron Williamscame out of the locker room to talk with Ariza and try to calm him. Ariza, who didn't speak with reporters after the game, eventually left without further incident.

Mejri, who strongly denied to ESPN's Tim MacMahon that he said anything about Ariza's family, knew Ariza was waiting for him outside the locker room.

"He was swearing and bulls---," Mejri said. "Ask him. He's out there. Ask him."

Earlier, Beverley, who didn't play, was sitting on a cart yelling at Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle, who was leaving his news conference.

"Don't be mad at us, Coach," Beverley yelled at Carlisle, who didn't respond to Beverley. "Way to be an icon, Coach. Have a nice season, Coach."

It was not clear what specifically upset Beverley, but he posted a tweet after the game:

The Rockets were not happy about the game, which included eight technical fouls, two flagrant fouls against the Mavericks and one ejection.

"I don't know what they were on tonight," Harden said. "That other team was tripping tonight. They were disrespectful, were unprofessional players and coaches. I don't know what was their problem, but I think that got us going. They wanted to throw a little cheap shot and just woke us up a little bit, and it was over from there."

Andrew Bogut was equally frustrated upon receiving a flagrant foul 1 during his return after missing 11 games with a right knee injury. The call came in the second quarter near the end of a 16-0 Houston run that broke a 37-all tie. Harden doubled over after running headfirst into the 7-foot, 260-pound Bogut's shoulder.

"If you watch the replay, yeah, he made no effort to run around my screen,'' said Bogut, who had a couple of sharp verbal exchanges with Harden. "Yeah, it was a hard screen, and I set hard screens. But to get a flagrant for it is kind of head-scratching.

"You admire the effort the league's putting in in Secaucus [New Jersey] with that beautiful facility where they watch replays and watch TV and have leather chairs and all that kind of stuff. But you scratch your head at a lot of these things, and it becomes very, very frustrating.''
 
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Rockets' Ariza waits outside locker room to confront Mavs' Mejri after testy game





DALLAS -- An ugly scene developed after Houston's 123-107 victory over Dallas on Tuesday night when Rockets forward Trevor Ariza waited outside the Mavericks' locker room to confront center Salah Mejri.

According to a source, Mejri made a derogatory comment to Ariza about Ariza's wife and children between the third and fourth quarters.

Ariza became so upset that he exchanged words with Mejri, which prompted the referees to give Ariza a technical, his second of the game, leading to an ejection.

After the game, Ariza dressed and walked toward the Dallas locker room, accompanied by two security guards. As Ariza and several Houston teammates -- including Patrick Beverley, James Harden and Eric Gordon -- waited for Mejri, Dallas police officers already outside the locker room as part of their regular detail monitored the situation to make sure it did not escalate.

At one point, Mavericks guard Deron Williamscame out of the locker room to talk with Ariza and try to calm him. Ariza, who didn't speak with reporters after the game, eventually left without further incident.

Mejri, who strongly denied to ESPN's Tim MacMahon that he said anything about Ariza's family, knew Ariza was waiting for him outside the locker room.

"He was swearing and bulls---," Mejri said. "Ask him. He's out there. Ask him."

Earlier, Beverley, who didn't play, was sitting on a cart yelling at Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle, who was leaving his news conference.

"Don't be mad at us, Coach," Beverley yelled at Carlisle, who didn't respond to Beverley. "Way to be an icon, Coach. Have a nice season, Coach."

It was not clear what specifically upset Beverley, but he posted a tweet after the game:

The Rockets were not happy about the game, which included eight technical fouls, two flagrant fouls against the Mavericks and one ejection.

"I don't know what they were on tonight," Harden said. "That other team was tripping tonight. They were disrespectful, were unprofessional players and coaches. I don't know what was their problem, but I think that got us going. They wanted to throw a little cheap shot and just woke us up a little bit, and it was over from there."

Andrew Bogut was equally frustrated upon receiving a flagrant foul 1 during his return after missing 11 games with a right knee injury. The call came in the second quarter near the end of a 16-0 Houston run that broke a 37-all tie. Harden doubled over after running headfirst into the 7-foot, 260-pound Bogut's shoulder.

"If you watch the replay, yeah, he made no effort to run around my screen,'' said Bogut, who had a couple of sharp verbal exchanges with Harden. "Yeah, it was a hard screen, and I set hard screens. But to get a flagrant for it is kind of head-scratching.

"You admire the effort the league's putting in in Secaucus [New Jersey] with that beautiful facility where they watch replays and watch TV and have leather chairs and all that kind of stuff. But you scratch your head at a lot of these things, and it becomes very, very frustrating.''


Mavs were on that bullshit last night. Dirk gave a cheap shot to Ryan Anderson too and Anderson checked him. Lmao at Beverly trolling Carlisle.
 
Utah’s Gordon Hayward drives, absorbs contact, slams over Julius Randle (VIDEO)
3
Comments
By Kurt HelinDec 28, 2016, 9:15 AM EST


Utah’s Gordon Hayward is the current holder of the “most underrated player in the NBA.” At least by casual fans. This guy can do a little bit of everything, he’s a borderline All-NBA player.

He showed it on this play. As the Lakers’ defense parted like the Red Sea, Hayward attacked the rim with a quick enough move. Julius Randle made the right move and tried to slide over and defend the rim, but Gordon just takes the contact in stride and slams it down over him. The Jazz went on to win the game 102-100 thanks to a Joe Ingles three.

Hayward will exercise his player option this summer and become probably the best player on the free agent market (of guys who teams think they can get,Stephen Curry isn’t leaving Golden State for example). Boston, with Hayward’s college coach Brad Stevens will come calling, but the Jazz will pay whatever it takes to keep him and he likes it in Salt Lake City. It’s going to be an interesting summer in Utah.
 
Paul George: Pacers, as ‘little brother of the league,’ don’t get calls



The Pacers’ 90-85 loss to the Bullsyesterday – in which Chicago attempted 28 free throws to Indiana’s 10 – set offPaul George (not that he needs much provocation).

George, via Nick Friedell of ESPN:

“I’ve been fined multiple times,” George told reporters. “I’ve been vocal to the point where the league issues [a statement], ‘Hey, we missed a call. Hey, we missed that.’ Officials do it during games [saying], ‘I missed that call, I missed this call. We’re sorry. We’re sorry.’ It’s getting repetitive. They see it, they know what’s going on. They know what’s a foul. They know what’s not a foul. It comes down from somewhere else how these games are going, I believe.”

George was asked if he felt that things would be different if he played for a big-market team.

“Since I’ve been in this jersey we’ve always fought this battle,” George said. “Ever since I’ve been playing, ever since I’ve been in this jersey we’ve fought this battle. Maybe the league has teams they like so they can give them the benefit of the doubt. We’re the little brother of the league. We’re definitely the little brother of the league.”

Referees are humans who sometimes make mistakes and sometimes acknowledge those mistakes. That’s not evidence of a greater conspiracy.

If the league were directing officials to favor large markets, what are the odds this would be the response? I believe at least one ref would spill the beans. This would be too large of a secret for so many people to keep. It’s nearly as unlikely that refs would tell – but only to players on the court by apologizing for missed calls and no other way.

The Pacers too often settle for jumpers, and they’ve defended aggressively over the years. That will lead to uneven foul counts. It’s not necessarily about market size.

The NBA will likely fine George, but the Pacers face a more difficult decision in their long-term planning. Will George bear down and fight for Indiana, or will he bolt for a team he believes gets a favorable whistle? The new veteran-designated-player rule could factor, but the Pacers should also consider these revealing comments.
 
The offense should have adjusted to more pic and roll towards the end of the game to punish them; and iggy and green turn the ball over; wasnt just iggy; and not to mention the shot clock violation which is another turnover; all in the last min of the game; any of those possessions would have put them over the top; stop turning the ball over!!!!

I've been complaining about Kerr's rotations since the start of the season and why in the hell he doesn't call pick and rolls with Curry and KD??? Kerr needs to figure this shit out, he's starting to annoy me as a coach. Another thing going on so far this season is that it's Steph that has been asked to sacrifice the most this season with KD coming in. He's not playing anywhere near the level he was last season.
 
I've been complaining about Kerr's rotations since the start of the season and why in the hell he doesn't call pick and rolls with Curry and KD??? Kerr needs to figure this shit out, he's starting to annoy me as a coach. Another thing going on so far this season is that it's Steph that has been asked to sacrifice the most this season with KD coming in. He's not playing anywhere near the level he was last season.
I agree with you 100%; I dont know if Kerr doesnt want to give teams tape of pick and roll or he just being a dumb ass; but they should be running pick and roll with KD and Step, KD and Klay, KD and Green, etc etc etc....but having said that, they still were up 14 in the fourth; so no excuses; stop being lazy and cute with the ball and the game is easily won....
 
I've been complaining about Kerr's rotations since the start of the season and why in the hell he doesn't call pick and rolls with Curry and KD??? Kerr needs to figure this shit out, he's starting to annoy me as a coach. Another thing going on so far this season is that it's Steph that has been asked to sacrifice the most this season with KD coming in. He's not playing anywhere near the level he was last season.


I swear I hate to do this to y'all, but this what "I" felt @RoadRage was trying to say but didn't actually say it.

I think Road could've changed one word and his post would've been less scrutinized.

KD "will" average 17pts vs KD "should" average 17pts to 23pts....

KD should take what Harrison had and turn those opportunities into great scoring situations. Offensive Rebounds, play tough defense, improve on small things.(while still being one of the baddest shooters to lace them up)


I've heard this from some of my nonbgol friends that seem like that fearful flow ain't there.

I quickly remember them, last year team was gutted. Also I stated, even if they would've kept Harrison they would've made changed unless the owners was about paying those crazy taxes.
 
I agree with you 100%; I dont know if Kerr doesnt want to give teams tape of pick and roll or he just being a dumb ass; but they should be running pick and roll with KD and Step, KD and Klay, KD and Green, etc etc etc....but having said that, they still were up 14 in the fourth; so no excuses; stop being lazy and cute with the ball and the game is easily won....



Yea, must agree about being up...

Bro y'all added KD, you playing a Cavs team down three players, 1 starter y'all pose to smash that ass, showing the league and casual fan yall the real deal.

Ain't no way y'all post to come to Cleveland and blow a 14pt 4th quarter lead, y'all the "Monstars"
 
Yea, must agree about being up...

Bro y'all added KD, you playing a Cavs team down three players, 1 starter y'all pose to smash that ass, showing the league and casual fan yall the real deal.

Ain't no way y'all post to come to Cleveland and blow a 14pt 4th quarter lead, y'all the "Monstars"
Dude, Cavs were down 1 player stop that:lol:; anderson and mo are non factors; lets not overstate it; but yes I agree the game should have been an easier one that what it was; and to be honest, GS was doing what they wanted to; Up 14 on the cavs at their place in the 4th is pretty big; GS led the whole dam game; but again they self destructed; Cavs made plays down the stretch so you gotta give them credit; 20 turnovers is ridiculous; 3 turnovers in the final minute is even more ridiculous; sometimes its overkill; just play ball; but yes the monsters were touched up in the last few mins...
 
damn Derrick Rose straight trash now.... his reign on top was shorter than leprechauns

The slumping Hawks had him and Porzingas about ready to go at it on the sideline tonight. Porzingas was like PASS THE DAMN BALL! @ DRose.

:lol:
 
The Warriors are 11-0 when Steph Curry, Klay Thompson and Kevin Durant all score 20 points.

 
Dude, Cavs were down 1 player stop that:lol:; anderson and mo are non factors; lets not overstate it; but yes I agree the game should have been an easier one that what it was; and to be honest, GS was doing what they wanted to; Up 14 on the cavs at their place in the 4th is pretty big; GS led the whole dam game; but again they self destructed; Cavs made plays down the stretch so you gotta give them credit; 20 turnovers is ridiculous; 3 turnovers in the final minute is even more ridiculous; sometimes its overkill; just play ball; but yes the monsters were touched up in the last few mins...


I hear ya!!!
 
I've been complaining about Kerr's rotations since the start of the season and why in the hell he doesn't call pick and rolls with Curry and KD??? Kerr needs to figure this shit out, he's starting to annoy me as a coach. Another thing going on so far this season is that it's Steph that has been asked to sacrifice the most this season with KD coming in. He's not playing anywhere near the level he was last season.
It is funny that they don't run the pick and roll. Curry mentioned it the other day as to why he struggles at times. That play would be deadly especially late in games or when trying to get a run started.
 
I swear I hate to do this to y'all, but this what "I" felt @RoadRage was trying to say but didn't actually say it.

I think Road could've changed one word and his post would've been less scrutinized.

KD "will" average 17pts vs KD "should" average 17pts to 23pts....

KD should take what Harrison had and turn those opportunities into great scoring situations. Offensive Rebounds, play tough defense, improve on small things.(while still being one of the baddest shooters to lace them up)


I've heard this from some of my nonbgol friends that seem like that fearful flow ain't there.

I quickly remember them, last year team was gutted. Also I stated, even if they would've kept Harrison they would've made changed unless the owners was about paying those crazy taxes.
No matter how you say it...that statement is as dumb as they come. KD could not average 17 pts if he tried to. He will always score the ball at a 50% clip or better.

Lets be real fam. Road Rage was dry hating and hoping KD would turn into Harrison Barnes. That is just another dumb thing he has said that people clown him for.
 
I clearly said he was inconsistent because of The MCL inury
not he as an overall player is inconsistent. Clearly said that. right here in this thread and you change that into what you're typing. smh.
Yeah MCL sprains are a lot tougher on basketball players than football. Football players can play on an MCL because they don't do a lot of change of direction and for the most part run in a straight line.

People fail to understand that the MCL affects your lateral movement.
 
No matter how you say it...that statement is as dumb as they come. KD could not average 17 pts if he tried to. He will always score the ball at a 50% clip or better.

Lets be real fam. Road Rage was dry hating and hoping KD would turn into Harrison Barnes. That is just another dumb thing he has said that people clown him for.
Very dumb and yes he was hating; he was being a bitch; it was ignorant to think that and then try to come with analysis as to why:hmm:;hell barnes could have averaged more than 17 if he was able to take advantage of all the easy looks he got; but this is his dumb ass claim to fame though
 
Very dumb and yes he was hating; he was being a bitch; it was ignorant to think that and then try to come with analysis as to why:hmm:;hell barnes could have averaged more than 17 if he was able to take advantage of all the easy looks he got; but this is his dumb ass claim to fame though

That faggit needs to be banned from this thread unless he takes everyone off ignore and man up with his bitch ass
 
Cavs bench finally producing between

Fyre and Shum



Channing Frye has scored in double-figures a season-high five straight games, his longest streak since February 2014. #DefendTheLandNBA.com/Stats ‏

 
LeBron James’ high road isn’t all that high




LeBron James claimed that he would take the high road, as always, during the NBA Finals. His high road is bogus and he needs to own it.

LeBron James had, arguably, the greatest NBA Finals series in history. He led an improbable comeback against a nearly unbeatable team. He was spectacular.

James also sat in front of the media and complained about trash talk. He argued that Draymond Green went overboard with his name calling, He cited his children and his status as a father as reasons why on-court trash talking between two fierce competitors at the highest level was inappropriate.

It came off as a little whiny. James was upset he got called a name and then he complained to the world about it. He wasn’t upset that Green may have made an attempt to hit him, he was hurt that he was called a name.

Several Warriors took shots at James. Marreese Speights tweeted out baby bottle emojis. Klay Thompson said he must have gotten his feelings hurt and that it’s a “grown man’s league.”

James responded to Thompson’s comments with some interesting comments of his own. The eventual Finals MVP said “It’s so hard to take the high road. I’ve been doing it for 13 years. It’s so hard to continue to do it, and I’m going to do it again.” Ayesha Curry made fun of those comments, but then James went on to mount an incredible comeback in the series.

LeBron James, for all intents and purposes, is a really good guy. He doesn’t have any off court problems and he represents the league very well. He does great work for the community and helps a lot of people.

He’s also just as arrogant and petty as Golden State. is. The Warriors get bashed for turning around before jumpers go in, bench celebrations, and their overall team identity. They make #LightYears ahead jokes and even threw a “Super Villains” themed party.

The Warriors have embraced who they are, reveling in the petty. James, unfortunately, has not. He pretends to “take the high road” when h goes as low as possible.

James threw a Halloween party in which their were some Warriors-themed decorations. There were reminders that Golden State was up 3-1 in the NBA Finals. There were cookies in the shape of tombstones that had Steph Curry and Klay Thompson’s names on them. It turns out, there was more.

The party, reportedly, had a dummy dressed as Curry at the entrance. Guests had to step over him to enter the party. The only reason James had to take the high road was because if he literally went low, he would have tripped over his own decoration.

The jabs, shots, and slights are all extremely fun, but you have to own it. James doesn’t. He wants to have his cake and eat it too. He can’t take the high road, talk about how he always does it, and then go and insult the other team. It’s like recording yourself giving money to someone on the street, claiming how bad you feel for the less fortunate, and then dehumanizing someone when the cameras are off.

James needs to choose a side. Either he’s arrogant or he’s not. Golden State has chosen it’s side.

The rivalry is better when the two teams don’t like each other. It thrives off these little petty acts where one player throws shade at the other squad. But the teams have to really get into it.

LeBron James’ high road is bogus. He isn’t that player. He has his own celebration after he hits game winners, his nickname is literally “King,” and he throws parties in which his opponents are dead decorations. His feelings really got hurt.

Perhaps the Warriors occupy more room in his head than he wants to admit because, even though he defeated the Dubs on Christmas Day, they’re coming for him.
 
LeBron James’ high road isn’t all that high




LeBron James claimed that he would take the high road, as always, during the NBA Finals. His high road is bogus and he needs to own it.

LeBron James had, arguably, the greatest NBA Finals series in history. He led an improbable comeback against a nearly unbeatable team. He was spectacular.

James also sat in front of the media and complained about trash talk. He argued that Draymond Green went overboard with his name calling, He cited his children and his status as a father as reasons why on-court trash talking between two fierce competitors at the highest level was inappropriate.

It came off as a little whiny. James was upset he got called a name and then he complained to the world about it. He wasn’t upset that Green may have made an attempt to hit him, he was hurt that he was called a name.

Several Warriors took shots at James. Marreese Speights tweeted out baby bottle emojis. Klay Thompson said he must have gotten his feelings hurt and that it’s a “grown man’s league.”

James responded to Thompson’s comments with some interesting comments of his own. The eventual Finals MVP said “It’s so hard to take the high road. I’ve been doing it for 13 years. It’s so hard to continue to do it, and I’m going to do it again.” Ayesha Curry made fun of those comments, but then James went on to mount an incredible comeback in the series.

LeBron James, for all intents and purposes, is a really good guy. He doesn’t have any off court problems and he represents the league very well. He does great work for the community and helps a lot of people.

He’s also just as arrogant and petty as Golden State. is. The Warriors get bashed for turning around before jumpers go in, bench celebrations, and their overall team identity. They make #LightYears ahead jokes and even threw a “Super Villains” themed party.

The Warriors have embraced who they are, reveling in the petty. James, unfortunately, has not. He pretends to “take the high road” when h goes as low as possible.

James threw a Halloween party in which their were some Warriors-themed decorations. There were reminders that Golden State was up 3-1 in the NBA Finals. There were cookies in the shape of tombstones that had Steph Curry and Klay Thompson’s names on them. It turns out, there was more.

The party, reportedly, had a dummy dressed as Curry at the entrance. Guests had to step over him to enter the party. The only reason James had to take the high road was because if he literally went low, he would have tripped over his own decoration.

The jabs, shots, and slights are all extremely fun, but you have to own it. James doesn’t. He wants to have his cake and eat it too. He can’t take the high road, talk about how he always does it, and then go and insult the other team. It’s like recording yourself giving money to someone on the street, claiming how bad you feel for the less fortunate, and then dehumanizing someone when the cameras are off.

James needs to choose a side. Either he’s arrogant or he’s not. Golden State has chosen it’s side.

The rivalry is better when the two teams don’t like each other. It thrives off these little petty acts where one player throws shade at the other squad. But the teams have to really get into it.

LeBron James’ high road is bogus. He isn’t that player. He has his own celebration after he hits game winners, his nickname is literally “King,” and he throws parties in which his opponents are dead decorations. His feelings really got hurt.

Perhaps the Warriors occupy more room in his head than he wants to admit because, even though he defeated the Dubs on Christmas Day, they’re coming for him.
Who wrote this bullshit article Mask?
 
Everybody does that shit. 1 side is celebrated and the other isn't.

One side can take unlimited shots and it's fun and all good
And the other side takes a shot and it's a low blow or they need to stop it or we're tired of it.
That's all I'm speaking on. Not any of the other horseshit in that article I'm not going to quote.
 
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