Kristaps Porzingis Ejection Gives NBA Playoffs Its First What-If Moment
Luka Doncic dropped 42 points and nine assists in his first NBA playoff game. And coughed up 11 turnovers. And left the game, briefly, in the first quarter after suffering a left ankle injury, leaving an entire fanbase—and viewership, really—in angsty lurch.
Dallas and Los Angeles also exchanged double-digit leads...in the opening frame. And Michael Kidd-Gilchrist hit two—two—three-pointers. And Kawhi Leonard exuded a particular command over the game, like only he can. And the Mavs caught fire from deep in the first half.
Oh, and then there's the outcome itself. The game was close. The Mavs scrapped until crunch time. Maybe their role players can give Doncic more help down the stretch. Maybe Tim Hardaway Jr. spending so much time on PG13 isn't as ridiculous as it sounds. Maybe Luka will be less exhausted and banged up.
Maybe, just maybe, the Mavs can make this a series—not just a thrilling, good-job-good-effort five- or six-game attaboy but an actual series.
The play on which Porzingis received his second tech didn't initially include him. Doncic and Marcus Morris Sr. got into a little post-whistle, ahem, entanglement following a drive by the former. Tensions escalated, slightly, which is when Porzingis entered the fold:
A scrum broke out after this play between Luka and Marcus Morris. pic.twitter.com/41gZIGsGCp
— ESPN (@espn) August 18, 2020
Upon further review, double technicals were assessed to Morris and Porzingis. This marked the second T of the game for the latter—his first came for an angry air-punch following a foul call he didn't like—so he was gone, with a little over nine minutes left in the third and Dallas leading Los Angeles by five:
Criticism for the referees was swift and unrelenting. LeBron James led the charge:Kristaps Porzingis was ejected after he received his second tech. pic.twitter.com/aQoJcrI8KE
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) August 18, 2020
So, too, did Mavs legend Dirk Nowitzki:Man that was BOGUS AS HELL MAN!!!!! Cmon man. 🤦🏾♂️
— LeBron James (@KingJames) August 18, 2020
The sentiment verged on consensus.That ejection is super soft...
— Dirk Nowitzki (@swish41) August 18, 2020
Why eject someone in a tightly contested playoff game? And not just someone but the Mavs' second-best player? For what amounted to less than a harmless kerfuffle?
Why let the outcome of a postseason tilt be even hypothetically impacted by a call, any call? Isn't it on the refs—in this case, Mark Ayotte, Eric Lewis and Kane Fitzgerald, who relayed the decision—to show some discretion? To be more in tune with what's at stake?
That Porzingis' first technical was so questionable didn't help matters. For one, he had a point:
More than that, his reaction to that first call was miles from egregious. Punching the air with no one in the vicinity is entirely innocuous.Porzingis ejected. One of his techs was after being upset that this was called a foul. Great stuff, everyone. pic.twitter.com/F2qQieweeh
— Jason Gallagher (@jga41agher) August 18, 2020
Yes, it's still worth a technical by letter of the law. But the playoffs aren't a time for intransigent enforcement...are they? They should be more interpretative, more flexible, more committed to ensuring the basketball portion of the program shapes the outcome in full...shouldn't they? At the bare minimum, technicals are closer to last resorts than formulaic implementations...are they not?
What comes next is...everything else. There's basically an entire series left to play. And this moment, while pivotal to the game itself, cannot be seen as a turning point.i'm reading the nba rule book and enjoying this sentence: "assessment of a technical foul shall be avoided whenever and wherever possible"
— tim cato (@tim_cato) August 18, 2020
The Mavs made other mistakes. Doncic took ownership of his turnovers, and though overburdened on offense, he needs to provide more resistance on defense. Dallas enjoyed stretches of cold shooting from Los Angeles and questionable decision-making down the stretch by its role players, namely Beverley and Lou Williams.
This was a helluva game, enthralling and highly competitive almost despite itself. The Mavs were robbed of 15 to 20 minutes of All-Star play and, maybe, a victory. It's on to the next anyway. Harping is useless, even if it turns out the refs messed up. And to the Mavericks' credit, they didn't sound like a team that will wallow in this defeat, however unfair it seems.
Not that they have a choice.
(Via: Don Vavale, Bleacher Report)
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