Amaré, Diaw could be suspended
Doug Haller
The Arizona republic
May. 15, 2007 12:06 AM
SAN ANTONIO – The Suns got to enjoy Game 4’s comeback 104-98 win for about 10 minutes before their attention turned to other matters.
The big question: Will they have Amare Stoudemire and Boris Diaw for Wednesday’s Game 5 in Phoenix?
Television replays showed Stoudemire and Diaw leaving the bench after Spurs forward Robert Horry fouled Steve Nash hard in the closing seconds at the AT&T Center.
After the game, Stoudemire and Diaw watched replays in an office inside the Suns locker room, trying to figure out what had happened.
“You know what? Let me enjoy this for about an hour,’’ Suns coach Mike D’Antoni said when asked about Stoudemire and Diaw’s availability. “I’m just happy to go home (with the series tied) 2-2. We’ll toss it up and play with what we got and try to have the same desperation. I’m not going to worry about it right now.”
With the Suns leading 100-97, Spurs guard Manu Ginobili missed a layup. Suns guard Leandro Barbosa grabbed the rebound. Nash took off down the right side.
“I was trying to skate between him and the boards and he got me with a nice hip check,’’ Nash said, using a hockey reference. “What can I say? It was a pretty nice check.”
D’Antoni rushed over to his point guard. Raja Bell approached Horry, and Nash got up and charged the Spurs forward as well. Stoudemire and Diaw appeared to leave the bench during the scuffle. No punches were thrown.
Horry received a flagrant foul type 2 and was ejected. Bell received a technical foul. Horry left the AT&T Center without taking to reporters after the game.
“You got to stand up for yourself sometimes,’’ Nash said. “I know you got to roll with the punches, literally, a lot of the time, but I felt like that was a little uncalled for. And it’s hard to not, I guess, always take the high road and always turn the other cheek. I knew he was going to foul me. I just didn’t know it was going to be of that variety.”
Bruce Bowen had kneed Nash in the groin in Game 3. The NBA reviewed the play, upgrading it to a flagrant foul, but decided that no fine or suspension was necessary. After Game 3, a Suns loss, Nash said the game’s physical element was great, and “that’s the way it’s supposed to be.”
He had a change of heart in Game 4.
“At what point is enough enough?’’ Nash said. “And at what point are you supposed to take offense? The league has made it very difficult nowadays to stand up for yourself. It’s their job, but at the same time their opinion does not always coincide with yours. It’s difficult, and I’m not really sure what the answer is.”
NBA rules state that during an altercation, “all players not participating in the game must remain in the immediate vicinity of their bench. Violators will be suspended, without pay, for a minimum of one game and fined up to $35,000. The suspensions will commence prior to the start of their next game."
Stoudemire, who led the Suns with 26 points, claimed he was trying to check into the game at the time of Horry’s foul, and that he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
“I was actually coming up on (the foul,)’’ he said. “I was kind of right behind it, going toward the scorer’s table. Then it all happened.”
As officials sorted out everything, Stoudemire turned toward the crowd and chanted “Dirty! Dirty!” He had called the Spurs a dirty team earlier this series and San Antonio fans serenaded him with the chant during Games 3 and 4.
Fans behind the Suns bench screamed at D’Antoni as well. D’Antoni jawed back, but maintained his composure.
“I think the issue that should be dealt with is Robert Horry and what he did,’’ Suns Chairman Jerry Colangelo said in the Suns locker room. “That caused the whole problem.”
Nash tried to downplay Stoudemire and Diaw’s involvement.
“First of all, that would be terrible if that silly play at the end of the game, when the game is really over, causes a detriment to the rest of the series,’’ he said. “Second of all, there wasn’t a fight. It wasn’t like guys left the bench to enter the fight. So I don’t see what, in the big picture, the deal is.
“If you want to be technical about it, guys are on the court the whole game, cheering at one time or another, and they’re over the (end) line. If someone’s not throwing a punch or someone doesn’t run out there to enter a fight, I think it’s a moot point.”
The Spurs didn’t have much to say about the incident. Tim Duncan left without talking to reporters. Asked if he had talked to Horry, Manu Ginobili said, “No. We were all pretty upset so there was not many words in the locker room.”
Said Bowen: “In these situations emotions get really high and it’s really intense. (Horry’s) a veteran and there are things that you wish you can take back, but in the heat of the battle, it’s hard to control those emotions.”
The Suns will practice around noon today in Phoenix. By then, they should know the fate of Diaw, Stoudemire and any other reserve that left the bench.
Stoudemire, who has battled recent foul trouble, averages 23.5 points and 10.3 rebounds against the Spurs. Diaw, known for his playmaking skills, is one of the team’s top reserves.
Stoudemire said he expects to play Wednesday, but he didn’t sound confident.
“I guess I got to say my prayers tonight,’’ he said.