Skip to main content

Steve Nash calls Khris Middleton's foul on Bruce Brown 'dangerous,' Kevin Durant objects to 'reckless' play


 


NEW YORK -- In the middle of the fourth quarter of the Milwaukee Bucks' 120-119 overtime win over the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday, an exciting game took a frightening turn when Khris Middleton fouled Bruce Brown on a breakaway dunk. Middleton was assessed a flagrant-2 foul and ejected.


It happened after Giannis Antetokounmpo tried to drop off a pass to Jrue Holiday and Brown stole it, then took off the other way. Brown slowed down, Middleton caught up and Middleton fouled Brown in mid-air. Brown crashed to the ground in dangerous fashion, and, after a replay review, it was ruled a flagrant-2. 


"I thought the Middleton play was risky," Nets coach Steve Nash said. "A guy has left his feet and you're coming behind; if you grab the arm, that's a very dangerous play. Unfortunate. I don't think Khris is a dirty player at all, but that is a dangerous play."


Khris Middleton was ejected after this foul.



Brown said he saw Middleton behind him before he took off. 


"I didn't think he was gonna grab me out the air," Brown said," but it's cool. It was just a hard foul. I'm good." 


After the foul, Brown remained in the game. He said that he feels "fine" and "just bruised a bone in my wrist." Asked if it was a basketball play, Brown said, "It's a hard foul. He wasn't trying to -- I mean, it's an open dunk. I mean, I wouldn't do it, but I don't care. It's fine."


Kevin Durant was less diplomatic when it came to the foul that caused his own uncomfortable landing. Late in overtime, the Bucks' Wesley Matthews fouled Durant on a corner 3, contesting the shot from the side and falling into Durant's leg. Durant was awarded three free throws, but he said it wasn't called a flagrant foul because of a technicality: Durant had just landed, so Matthews was not invading his landing space.   


"We all thought that was reckless," Durant said. "Right? But I think technically, like, I have to be in the air and if come down on his foot, then that's the flagrant. But he can run into my leg, though. A split second before, you know what I mean, as I was coming down, I might have hit the floor -- and then as soon as I hit the floor, here he comes running at my leg. You know? But it wasn't a contest. I thought it was supposed to be a flagrant, but technically I didn't make the correct play to get a flagrant. I was supposed to still be in the air while he's underneath me."



Durant continued: "I'm hurting. That's two games in a row a player has walked up underneath me when I'm trying to make a basketball play. So my ankle's hurt."


He clarified that he does not expect to miss any time because of the sore ankle. "It's just a little sore, you know how that go," he said. Durant smiled at a reporter before adding, "Or do you?"


As for the "two games in a row" part, Durant could have been referring to any or all of these plays against the Detroit Pistons on Tuesday:



Kyrie Irving objected to Milwaukee's style more generally.  


"They were playing pretty physical," Irving said. "I think they were a little reckless at times, just on ... a few of their fouls."


Irving added, "That's who they are." He declined, however, to discuss individual plays. 


"I'll leave it to people who are observing the game, but it was just recklessness," Irving said. "Just being in the way at times when it's just an easy play to avoid."


Irving injured his ankle in Game 4 of last year's second-round series against the Bucks when he landed on Antetokounmpo's foot. On Jan. 17, after a game in Cleveland, Irving brought up that play unprompted, saying, "I'm going up for a shot, and Giannis comers over, and his foot just happens to be in the way." 




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dennis Rodman Once Said He, Michael Jordan, And Scottie Pippen Could Lock Up LeBron James: "LeBron Is So Easy To Play. He’s So F**king Easy To Play. He Doesn’t Have Any Moves."

  If there is something that will never end it is the comparison between players from different eras. Even in that niche, most comparisons revolve around the legendary players from the Chicago Bulls. Yes, we are talking about the likes of Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, and Dennis Rodman. A perfect example of that was seen by fans back in a 2019 interview featuring Dennis Rodman. The Worm was asked about his thoughts on guarding none other than LeBron James. Rodman replied: (starts at 6:06) "You know who could lock up LeBron? Me, Mike, and Scottie could. F*ck yeah. I would have locked his a** up. LeBron is so easy to play. He’s so f*cking easy to play, he don’t have any moves. Only move he has is streak down the line. He ain’t got no moves. Where he going?? Where is he going that’s quick? That’ll be sh*t, you can stop that. Scottie Pippen would have shut his f*cking a** down quick before I get to him. His game is too simple, he’s just big. I’m 260 and 6’8” and 6’9”, that’s the onl...

From Deep: At long last, Nikola Jokic's Nuggets can envision getting to the top of the mountain

  Jamal Murray tore his ACL on April 12, 2021. Leading up to that night, he'd been playing at an All-NBA level for two months: In a 25-game stretch, Murray averaged 24.1 points on .509/.459/.935 shooting splits, 4.2 rebounds and 5.2 assists. He was even more efficient than he was in the bubble playoffs, and his defense had improved, too. Murray only got to play with Aaron Gordon, the Denver Nuggets' big trade-deadline addition, for five games. They won them all except the one in which Murray got injured. In 110 minutes, their new starting five scored slightly more efficiently than any iteration of the Kevin Durant-era death lineup in Golden State and defended like a top-five team. Two Nikola Jokic MVP awards later, Murray is back. So is Michael Porter Jr., who signed a five-year extension about a year ago and needed back surgery nine games into the 2020-21 season. The Nuggets remember how easily everything slid into place with Gordon in the mix. Newcomer Kentavious Caldwell-Pop...

Michael Jordan On LeBron James: "He's An Unbelievable Player, He's One Of The Best Players In The World... I'm A Fan Of His, I Love Watching Him Play..."

  Even before he made it to the NBA, LeBron James was already compared to the greatest player of all time, Michael Jordan. His Airness made a huge impact on the league, winning six championships in eight years, dominating rivals every night, and becoming one of the best two-way players in NBA history.  During his career, and even during his retirement, many players were compared to Jordan, but nobody could live up to the expectations. LeBron James was deemed 'The Chosen One' when he was a teenager, and comparisons between him and MJ never stopped coming.  They have mutual respect, and the biggest proof of that came during the 2022 All-Star Game, where MJ and Bron embraced each other in Cleveland. James would post a big pic of his first and most recent encounter with Jordan, paying respect to the man that inspired him.  Just like the Los Angeles Lakers superstar has always shown his admiration for James, Jordan has done the same before. Back in 2020, during a press co...