Bogut
called for flagrant foul on Harden as tempers flare
Send a link to a friend
[December 28, 2016]
(The Sports Xchange) - Tempers
flared between the Houston Rockets and Dallas on Tuesday, with the
Mavericks' Australian center Andrew Bogut among those involved in
the thick of the action.
Bogut seemed confused about why he had been called for a flagrant
foul that helped spur a game-changing 16-0 run by the Rockets in the
second quarter.
Both locker rooms had plenty to say even though the Rockets won a
lopsided game 123-107 in Dallas.
The teams combined for eight technical fouls and two Flagrant 1s and
even saw Houston's Trevor Ariza ejected in the fourth quarter.
It all may have stemmed from a Flagrant 1 called on Bogut in the
second quarter, when he tried to lay a hard screen on Houston star
James Harden. The Rockets were on an 11-0 run at that point, and it
became a 16-0 run after Bogut's foul.
Harden made both free throws and then drained a 3-pointer on the
ensuing possession, a pivotal stretch that Dallas coach Rick
Carlisle called "the killer" for his team's chances.
The players were a little more colorful than that.
"I don't know what they was on tonight," Harden said. "That other
team was trippin' tonight, just disrespectful, 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."
Bogut didn't feel he warranted a flagrant foul on the play. He
didn't get an explanation from the officials, quipping that he'll
have to go through his agent and Mavs general manager Donnie Nelson
to try to avoid a fine.
"If you watch the replay, yeah, (Harden) made no effort to run
around my screen," said Bogut, who had missed the previous 11 games
with a bone bruise in his right knee.
"So obviously I turned to protect myself and hit him and he went
face-first into my shoulder. Yeah, it was a hard screen and I set
hard screens. But to get a flagrant for it is kind of
head-scratching when I felt like (Mavs guard) Justin Anderson had
his wrist in a ju-jitsu hold four plays later, and that was brushed
off like a regular foul."
Bogut then took a subtle shot at the league office.
"You admire the effort the league's putting 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," Bogut said.
[to top of second column] |
Mavericks center Andrew Bogut (6) reacts during the game against the
Houston Rockets at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Kevin
Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports
"But
you scratch your head at a lot of these things and it becomes very,
very frustrating."
The competitive juices certainly flowed during and after the game.
But Bogut acknowledged that his flagrant had nothing to do with the
outcome, saying the Mavs "got absolutely killed." The Rockets were
just too strong for them once again.
The Rockets (24-9) swept all four games against the Mavericks for
the first time since the 1997-98 season, and they have won 13 of
their last 15.
Harden led the way with 34 points, 11 assists and five rebounds.
Forward Ryan Anderson finished with 22 points.
But the intensity of the game became the story.
"Obviously it's a competition," Anderson said. "You have guys
battling each other, you get hit and you feel like you have to
retaliate sometimes. But we held our heads, we got the win, and
that's all that matters."
The Mavs (9-23), meanwhile, own the worst winning percentage in the
Western Conference at .391. Harrison Barnes led them with 21 points,
while Wesley Matthews had 19.
For his part, Matthews wasn't pleased with the number of technical
and flagrant fouls on the night.
"I don't know what that was. It wasn't even basketball," Matthews
said.
"Tempers between two in-state teams that play each other four times
... We have to be better than that. There was opportunity for us to
channel it into basketball, and we didn't do that."
(Editing by Andrew Both)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|