jbk1234 wrote:JonFromVA wrote:jbk1234 wrote:
An ongoing problem across two different coaching staffs is that we don't have a guy who will dissuade other teams from playing recklessly against us, so other teams will regularly play recklessly against us.
Garland was yanked from behind to the ground by one Sixer and the other dove through him to get to the ball and there was no call. The officials tightened up the game afterwards, but the incentives for junking up the game against the Cavs aren't great.
Even if we did, the team prides itself on playing "ethical basketball" while NBA is encouraging physical play.
I mean, did you see the call they overturned where Mobley and Embiid smacked each other in the face and they called a loose ball foul on Mobley because they apparently decided his blow landed first (by a fraction of a second)?
Why did the refs ignore that Mobley was the defensive rebounder with great position and it was Embiid who was shoving in to Mobley to take the rebound away from him?
I'm suggesting they fill that 15th spot with a guy who is capable of standing up for his teammates in the game when the reckless play is happening prior to someone getting injured. The only players capable of escalating in real time to stop play are Hunter, Mitchell, and Strus, but I've never seen them do it on behalf of a teammate.
The one time Allen set a hard screen to get an overly physical defender off Garland, he was ejected because JBB had a full blown meltdown (which was just absurd). If we're not going to address junking up the game, in real time, we need the guy on bench who makes the officials think about whether it's maybe time to tighten up the whistles, and the other team think about being on the receiving end of reckless play.
Not for nothing, but I expect my coach to watch the rest of the game from the locker room if my all star PG gets injured on a play like that and there's no call.
Kenny could also go on a post game tirade, but the refs calling a foul right isn't going to stop physical/reckless play ... and sadly Garland hurting his foot again because he decided to try to stop his fall with his toes is more of a him problem than a league problem.
If he's that brittle and/or his toe is that unprotected (perhaps because he got tired of playing with a more protective brace in his shoe!?!?) then it was more just a matter of time before he aggravated it again.









