Effigy wrote:MastaStrategist wrote:Conclusion wrote:I didn't think he purposefully meant to clock Harden. He was probably filled with testosterone and by his very erratic and violent nature clocked whoever got in his way for his celebration.
He still should be suspended for some games.
Agreed
You're both wrong. If he didn't mean to do it, some surprise would have registered on his face when his elbow slammed into another player's skull. He would have stopped to check on how the player was doing, not kept prancing down the court. There's no doubt at all it was intentional. Only the largest of homer would try to argue otherwise.
Damn straight. In the split second that the situation developed Ron-Ron's flawed brain decided to throw that elbow at whatever OKC player had decided to invade his space when he was celebrating. If it was a complete shock to him he would have turned back to see what damage he caused. He didn't. He expected the impact. Bad news for Ron.
I have little doubt that Ron had no premeditated intent of hitting Harden with an elbow to the head during the game, but it did happen. Honestly, regardless of whether you like Ron Artest as a person or not -- and I do, for the record -- it matters. Artest cannot control his emotions. He has a long history of this and it has caused more than one black eye to the league. I have my doubts as to whether or not it will happen at this point, but eventually the league is going to have to make a business decision and decide to cut its losses.
As I said before, I don't think that Artest is a "bad" guy. He has psychological issues. I think he has done a pretty decent job treating them over the past decade, but treatment isn't infallible. You will have moments like this. For Ron those moments tend to be very public. These twitter ramblings are certainly not helping his cause.
Side note. I have serious doubts about how well Artest is going to do in the decade or so after he leaves the NBA. I fear that some people who care about him now are going to start caring less as he becomes less 'relevant.'