
Clearly he shouldn't have cheap shotted or flopped to cause David West's reaction here.
edit: Griff is 25 today.
Neddy wrote:do you blame victims why they deserved rape?
"It’s amazing. I don’t get it. I honestly don’t," Clippers coach Doc Rivers told me in his office before the Warriors game. "He had that soft label. People come in with that label and labels are hard to get rid of. They really are. They hear it and guys come in, they play him and they hear that label and the next thing they know they’re getting their ass kicked. Physically, by Blake. Speedwise, by Blake. All over the floor. He’s making jumpers, he’s posting them up, he’s more physical than they thought and I think they take it personally. I ain’t going to let this happen to me. Not this guy. What they don’t realize is, he ain’t that guy. He ain’t what they think he is."
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Let’s say Griffin finally snaps. He gets suspended, costing the Clippers one of their two best players at a time when the difference between first and fourth place in the Western Conference is less than five games and then there’s a new problem. If opponents think Griffin can get rattled in the regular season, he’ll get it even worse in the playoffs.
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"Honestly it didn’t really feel like it took a lot out of me," Griffin said. "I’m just being honest, but if it looked like that I guess I have to work on my conditioning. When shots are falling like that from the outside, I’ve had to work a lot harder for some shots."
And therein lies not only the seeds of the animosity, but also the flat-out truth. It wasn’t that hard for Griffin, especially in the first quarter when he scored 22 points on only nine shots.
He’s just not supposed to acknowledge that. The proper response would have been a show of fake humility, dutifully recorded and noted in the next day’s papers. But that’s not Blake Griffin.
mkwest wrote:When he was in college, I used to wonder if he was cocky/arrogant or a huge trash talker due to some of the cheap shots that he received.
Having watched him over the last 5 years or so, I know that's not the case. You don't see him doing a bunch of showboating or a whole lot of jawing back and forth with other players. There are stars/superstars in the league that do showboat, talk trash, pump their chests, talk slick in the media, etc. They don't get the same cheap shots that Blake gets.
The word on him was that if you challenge him early that he would back down or that it would curtail his aggressiveness. He hasn't really retaliated back in an aggressive manner yet. However, he's beginning to attack on the court.
I think some of it is jealousy. Crab bucket mentality. Players have egos (some larger than others). It could be hard when there's a player that you feel that you are equal to or better than, but he's getting all the accolades and fame. You don't hear Blake boast on himself. He says he wants to be great and all, but he doesn't go out of his way to give himself a ton of praise. You don't hear him going around saying that he's the best at his position or that he's better than anyone. He just goes to work. Some other players talk themselves up quite a bit.
Some of it is frustration. Danny Granger recently stated that players get mad when they have to guard Blake and aren't able to do much to stop him. You're likely not going to outhusle or outplay him athletically. Odom was pissed that he was still playing hard for a rebound off a free-throw a couple of years ago. He's very hard to outmuscle. He's strong, quick, nimble and there's the vertical aspect as well. When it's all said and done, he may posterize you and then everybody's talking about how you died from some dunk or you name becomes a verb.
With him not really boasting/bragging, it's like he's not acknowledging you. He may have made you look silly, but he's not even paying you much mind like it was no accomplishment at all. Maybe that makes them feel like he's disrespecting them. One thing he has done is laugh off some of the comments that some opposing players make rather than play the game of going back and forth. It's happened with Randolph and more recently with O'neal. Nobody wants to be brushed off.
Is Blake a cheap/dirty player? He used to sell a lot of contact after not getting calls that he deserved. I believe that he's cut back on that over the last 2 seasons, but that reputation is hard to shake. Every player believes that he's never committed a foul. When it's against a player like Blake (who you are already probably playing harder than you would someone less physical), it must be his fault that you're sitting on the bench in foul trouble and not because you actually committed the foul.
If you read some of the comments posted from fans across the NBA world that point the finger solely at Blake, then I say that he needs to be actually given some credit if it's all his fault. If he's the sole reason for the skirmishes and the hostility, then he's underrated as hell in playing mind games with opposing players.
At the end of the day, I think there's a reason players' perception of him change once they become a teammate of his. It's not just hype or being a media darling, but the guy puts in work. From an outside perspective, you don't see the work until you see the result. For me as a fan, one of the biggest surprises was a few comments made by Randolph. If you watch them play, you would think that he absolutely doesn't respect Blake and has a serious axe to grind, but his comments spoke pretty highly of his adversary.
Darius wrote:It would be very blind/naive to believe Griffin gets in these scuffles because "he is just so good players are mad at him".
He clearly has something about him that causes players to react with physical frustration.
It is likely he is just very physical and always leaning/bumping/tangling with guys. Kind of like why people hate Tyler Hansborough.
As for Blake not showboating? Or course he showboats. He just does it in a different way through staredowns etc.
"In terms of trying to damage Griffin's reputation, I don't think players think that far ahead. The game happens in split second time. If you're thinking that a lot of these players are getting into these situations with the intent of (ruining Griffin's reputation) or causing bodily harm, that's inferring much too much into the incident."
Wammy Giveaway wrote:QRich, can you give me the link to the podcast where Jalen Rose talks about the Griffin-O'Neal incident?
Blake Griffin endures hack attackA man too selfless and indispensable to his team to haul off and make someone spit out his teeth just to enjoy some frontier justice.
It's not often an offensive player is reputed to be the most loathed man in the league among his peers. Yet Griffin gets treated like that a lot.And yet, while Oklahoma City's Kevin Durant seems universally admired and Golden State sharpshooter Stephen Curry is seen as a canny, saucer-eyed assassin, cute as some plush toy you win at a carnival, Griffin has had run-ins or takedowns this season alone with Oklahoma City's Serge Ibaka, Phoenix's P.J. Tucker, Miami's Greg Oden, Denver's Kenneth Faried and numerous Warriors.
And his treatment has not been seen as the usual stuff that happens in the flow of the game.
Griffin has heard that his peers think he preens and showboats too much. Or that they try to bait him into trouble because it's nigh impossible to stop him otherwise.Rivers has said the league and its officials too often look the other way when Griffin is mugged.
But here's the thing: "It's true," Indiana head coach Frank Vogel said with a laugh Wednesday. "We all know Blake gets more hard fouls than anybody in the league. But there's a reason for that. The guys that are guarding him don't want to get dunked on and end up on SportsCenter."
Griffin has drawn a league-high 516 fouls, 67 more than Houston's Dwight Howard, who is in second place.
If the Pacers and Clippers play each other in the NBA Finals, Vogel may regret admitting some maulings of Griffin go unpunished.
Johnette Howard, ESPN Los Angeles
Miller questions suspension that ended his ironman streak (12/8/10)
His reaction to the suspension: “I was surprised. I actually wasn’t even notified. I found out toward the evening when I was sleeping that there would be a suspension. It just shows you how soft the league has gotten, protecting young players. It’s not like it was when I came (into) this league.”
On if he thinks the collision will trigger referees to watch Blake Griffin more closely: “No, not really, because he’s going to get away with it. I don’t have nothing against him being an aggressive big man. I don’t think I would have been suspended if there was a flagrant foul called on the court. (Blazers center Marcus) Camby whacked someone in the face and he didn’t get suspended. The rules don’t apply to everyone.”
On whether he would have done it again knowing it would warrant suspension: “I took two shots. The referees didn’t call it on that end. I took two shots, then I gave a shot. I told the ref, ‘We can call that even now.’ He didn’t make the call, and he was looking right at it.”
On whether the suspension was justified: “It wasn’t justified at all. If I was a dirty player that was looking to go out and hurt someone then I can understand, ‘OK, this guy has a reputation.’ Back in the day, like John Stockton, tough-minded player, some people thought he was dirty. He never got suspended for anything. The league has changed, they favor the young guys now, and that’s just how it is.”
Matt Calkins, The Columbian
Monty Williams apologizes for foul (3/27/12)
"He's no fool -- he knows he's making people look crazy and guys don't like that," Williams said of Griffin. "He's gotta expect some of that. It's just gonna happen. If you jump 5 feet over somebody and dunk it and you got people coming up to you and hugging you after you do it, the opponent's not gonna say, 'Oh, man, can you do that again?'
"He's a phenomenon, and a lot of guys don't like that."
Williams added that Griffin was "really cool" about the situation in exchanging texts with him Friday.
Pedro Moura, ESPN Los Angeles
Cousins: Griffin 'babied' by league (4/6/12)
"He's babied," Cousins told SI.com after the Kings fell to the Clippers 93-85. "He's the poster child of the league. He sells tickets, but he's babied. Bottom line."
Babied by whom, Cousins was asked.
"The refs, the league -- period," he continued. "He gets away with [everything]. He taunts players. Nothing is done. He's babied."
Sam Amick, Sports Illustrated
Serge Ibaka hits Blake Griffin below waist, not ejected (3/13/13)"I didn't see it to where it was like that flagrant. (Griffin) took (Ibaka's) arm and knocked him down. The dude (is) known for flopping anyway, so that's what it is," Thunder's Kendrick Perkins told USA TODAY Sports' Sam Amick after the game. "I was (angry). The (Clippers') reaction after that was kind of like Serge Ibaka against Blake Griffin.
"He ain't going to get the benefit of (the doubt) or what's really happening down there. You ain't seeing all the stuff that other people are doing. Serge ends up getting the bad end of the stick. I didn't like the whole thing — period. I thought it should've been a double foul.""I just tried to play hard. I really don't care if someone is dirty or not, that's not my problem," Ibaka said. "His game was intense, we all were complaining to the referees (about) some dirty stuff. It's basketball. We just played.
"If you can see the replay, you can see he grabbed my jersey first so I wanted to try to defend myself. (But) not to hurt him."
Adi Joseph, USA Today
Blake Griffin ejection deemed wrong (12/27/13)Bogut defended his actions a day later.
"We're just trying to win the game," Bogut said Thursday, according to the Bay Area News Group. "We did whatever it took to win the game. We made the big plays toward the end. Everyone's entitled to their opinions and comments, and we're not really affected by that. We'd rather be called cowards and come out with the win."Green declined to elaborate on what may have led to his elbow to Griffin.
"It was a tough division game," Green said, according to the Bay Area News Group. "That's one of the big things that happens in a tough division game when you've got two good teams playing against each other. We were able to come out with the win. We did the necessary things, made the necessary plays we needed to make to come out with the win."
ESPN Los Angeles
Clippers' Blake Griffin shows restraint on the court (2/22/14)
Griffin explains that the restraint he shows stems from an early lesson his father, Tommy Griffin, taught him.
“I've experienced things like that almost since high school,” Griffin said. “As a bigger guy, you kind of get fouled a lot, fouled harder. It's something my dad always taught me and told me. Just to respond with how you play because you don't want to put your team in a bad situation by getting kicked out of a game or anything like that.”
That's what Griffin remembers thinking way back in the first round of the 2009 NCAA Tournament, when a player from Morgan State flipped him over his back and sent Griffin crashing hard to the court.
Once again, Griffin got up and walked away.
“That was a situation where I really didn't want to do anything because obviously the tournament means everything,” Griffin said. “So nothing anybody could have done at that point (was going to matter). I was not going to put myself or my team in that situation.”
Darnell Mayberry, The Oklahoman
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