Good Cop, Bad Cop....
Stern says Ibaka deserved ejection for low-blow on GriffinDavid Stern told reporters on a visit to Golden State Friday night that Serge Ibaka should have received a flagrant 2 after officials' review for his low blow against the Clippers last Sunday. Stern also said he was not part of the review that upgraded Ibaka's foul to a flagrant 2 without suspension by the league this week.
Two odd things about this. One, it's odd that Stern had no involvement in the decision as it's often thought that Stern has his hands in everything that has to do with league business. Two, it's rare that Stern will say things counter to the league's decision. But this one was pretty obvious.
Given the kind of Flagrant 2's that have been handed out this season, not tossing Ibaka from that game was egregious. To then respond by not punishing him more than a paltry $25,000 fine is kind of absurd.
Matt Moore,
CBS Sports
The question has nagged at a lot of us all week: How on Earth did Serge Ibaka avoid a one-game suspension for swinging down into Blake Griffin's crotch on national TV?
I can't remember a disciplinary decision from the league office that triggered so much commentary from active players on Twitter -- most notably from LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Blake Griffin himself -- but we now have an answer.
Some checking with the league office this week revealed that
Stu Jackson & Co. deemed Ibaka's contact with Griffin's, uh, groin area to be unintentional. The league view, I'm told, is that Ibaka was slapping at an arm that Griffin unexpectedly pulled away, leading to the painful connection and thus distinguishing the play from the "groin altercations" that earned Wade and DeMarcus Cousins suspensions earlier this season.
My view is that Ibaka unequivocally should have been suspended for a game anyway, because when you swing that hard -- no matter what you are aiming at -- you have to be accountable for the final outcome. When a defender tries to make a hard play on the ball and winds up connecting with a driver's head, there are consequences. Same thing here.
Marc Stein,
ESPN
I threw Stern's name into the bunch, but I guess it looks like I'd be owing him an apology. I was right on the money with Jackson though. So according to Stu Jackson, it was Blake's own fault that he got hit where it counts. That is the stupidest reasoning that they could possibly come up with

Anytime a player gets hit, all they can say is that it was the other player's fault for getting in my way, because I was just trying to swing or kick at the air. Incompetent pieces of trash. I can only hope that Jackson gets "unintentionally" hit in his soon. Jackass.