http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=12770It wasn't so long ago that Bowen was one causing scandalous headlines across the NBA. He was labeled a "dirty" player by opposing teams, while the Spurs themselves simply called him their best defender. Bowen made a name for himself in the NBA with his ability to stop some of the league's best scorers . . .if a few ankles got twisted or ribs got bruised, that was just a side effect of being defended by the best. Sure, coaches and players alike complained to the league, but at the end of the day Bowen went right on playing that hard-nosed defense and the Spurs won three championships during his watch. The Denver Nuggets would love for Dahntay Jones to have the same kind of impact on their team over the next few years. "There's another situation out there tonight that was unacceptable by Dahntay Jones," Phil Jackson said after his Los Angeles Lakers dropped Game 4 in Denver last night. "Just unacceptable defense, tripping guys and playing unsportsmanlike basketball."
The complaint was about a sequence late in the third quarter in which Kobe Bryant cut to the basket in pursuit of a rebound, only to find himself skidding across the floor after tripping over Jones' foot. Jackson was so incensed over the lack of a foul call that he brought on an inevitable fine from the NBA by venting his frustration to gathered post-game media in Denver. Was it a foul? Did Jones intentionally trip Kobe, or was it a case of two hustling players getting tangled at floor level with one losing his footing as a result? Nature does, indeed, abhor a vacuum, and it looks like Jones is ready and will to . . .well . . . step . . . into the Bruce Bowen slot.
Kobe didn't take the bait when he was asked about the play, simply laughing it off and jokingly attributing his cross-court slide to his own clumsiness. But rest assured, we haven't heard the last of this complaint. The Lakers will no doubt send video to the league for review and they'll make their case that Jones is a dirty player, not just a solid defender. But if history holds, no action will be taken by the league. They might ask the refs to watch Jones a little closer, but at the end of the day, he's been tasked with guarding one of the most unguardable players in the history of the NBA. "Just playing hard," Jones said. "If he can't respect it, I'm sorry. I'm trying to be aggressive and give it all I have out there. My teammates appreciate it."