druggas wrote:Chuck Everett wrote:druggas wrote:He just painted a target on his back. Not smart.
So you believe the NBA refs would collude against Van Vleet and the Raptors? If so, the NBA doesn't have a problem with the officiating? That only validates what Fred is talking about.
If you think referees aren't human and they just let stuff like this drop, you're kidding yourself. Referees have always had their favorites and they listen to players if they aren't whining on every call. But when you go to the media and call them out by name, you probably won't get any favorable calls. That's where he made his mistake. He could have let his coach rant about the refs which would have been better for him in the long run.
That worry is definitely the reason that the majority of players in league history have been afraid to speak up in this way, because they KNOW that the refs can act with near impunity to get back at a player or team who crosses that invisible line in the sand.
This is the first time in a long while that it's been so direct - Iverson vs Javie was probably the last time - and that went TERRIBLY for Iverson, as the officials open;y punished him for weeks afterwards with bad calls, non calls, etc... Thing is, there was a gambling scandal since then (Donaghy), social media has become a very powerful presence, and most of all, the entire NBA world will now be focused on the outcome of this. If there is any sort of directed retribution by the officials, it will backfire very badly for the league.
Fred is going to get at least the max $50K fine, plus some sort of suspension that loses him even more money, rather than a much bigger fine that would have to go through arbitration to enforce - something the league probably wants to avoid as it would give Fred, the Raptors, and the NBAPA an opportunity to file grievances over, which would blow this up into an even bigger thing.