Jae wrote:I think 'Sheed is back on the weed.
He's not back on weed. He has always been on weed, with his guaran-sheeds.
Jae wrote:I think 'Sheed is back on the weed.
Christopherson wrote:I read about how Robert Horry worked out a system with the officials where he had a hand signal to ask whether it was ok to talk to the official. He would give the signal, and the refs would nod their head indicating if it was ok to come over and talk. I think this is an excellent system that more players should adopt.
The Black Death wrote:Christopherson wrote:I read about how Robert Horry worked out a system with the officials where he had a hand signal to ask whether it was ok to talk to the official. He would give the signal, and the refs would nod their head indicating if it was ok to come over and talk. I think this is an excellent system that more players should adopt.
Complaining about calls in sign-language! Brilliant idea!
Rasheed Wallace watched the Spurs-Mavericks game with high interest Thursday night. "Yeah, I watched that game," he said. "I didn't see no technical fouls given out there and I seen Tim Duncan do a lot of pointing and stuff like I did. All it is, is discrimination." Wallace, after holding his tongue for a day, finally had his say on his ejection from the season-opening loss to the Bucks on Wednesday. He was the first victim of the league's no-tolerance policy regarding disputes with referees. "In my opinion, it's really (garbage)," he said. "It's just given (referees) more power than what a majority of them can handle."
Paul Pierce wrote:"I saw [Thursday] night with Carmelo [Anthony]. I thought they overreacted. It was crazy to see Carmelo kicked out, especially with the NBA really promoting Carmelo, Dwyane Wade, and LeBron [James]. It's a nationally televised game and Carmelo gets kicked out. I think the refs have to use better judgment with that. Then again, it's their call."
You all seen what I did," Wallace said. "I said, 'Oh!' on the first tech because it was a good block. Then on the second one, the dude (Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva) threw an elbow and I told the other two refs that I ain't going to be going for that. I can deal with losing. "I can deal with having a bad game and I can deal with shooting woes. But I can't deal with no dirty play and no cheating. "Then I told that to Lou Grillo, and he said something back and I said, 'I am just letting everyone know,' and that's when they gave me that second tech and threw me out."
-Young Buck- wrote:I love it personally. I get sick of guys complaining to the refs about calls. They can still talk to the ref if they want.
koberulz wrote:the other thing is the line between disappointment/anger with self, and actually disputing the call.
i saw an NBL game last year where one guy was called for reaching in on a dribbler in the back court. he yelled "AARGH!" and punched the air in an angry fashion. the refs let it go, as it appeared more like he was angry at himself for fouling, rather than the ref for calling it. i didn't see the rasheed situation, but it sounds a similar thing.
Andrew wrote:The suggestion is that the players will get used to it, the referees might get a better feel for it, they'll find a happy medium and things will get back to normal.
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