OPINION

In Defense of the NBA Suspending Darius Songaila

Written by Craig Lyndall
Published May 05, 2008

The reason that I feel like writing about this at all is that as the media cycle has come around on this Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Washington Wizards first-round matchup, and the prevailing opinion that Wizards forward Darius Songaila should not have been suspended for Game 6 has now become an unarguable fact in the media. I heard Steve Czaban talk about it this morning on Fox Sports Radio. I heard commentators talk about it during the Cavs' Game 6. I heard commentators talk about it during the Celtics vs. Hawks Game 6. It seems that everyone talking about this suspension is now referring to it as a great travesty - an injustice of epic proportions - the proof that the NBA is at worst fixed, and at best in favor of protecting their meal-ticket LeBron James to whatever lengths to ensure that he succeeds.

I have heard quite enough of this.

Yes, the NBA has a vested interest to protect LeBron James. As a fan of the Cleveland Cavs, I would argue that they didn't do a good job at all. All series long the Wizards talked about hitting LeBron when he drove through the lane. And the proof was there that the Wizards were no longer looking to play basketball. Instead they decided to commit fouls and try to physically intimidate one of the game's best players by hitting him rather than playing tough defense and double-teaming him.

What is the NBA supposed to do when a team like the Wizards is so blatant and unapologetic about their tactics? They don't have a right to beat up one of the game's best players and tell the world that they plan on doing it without some reaction from the NBA executive office. It isn't in the league's best interest to let any of this stuff happen. Ever since the Ron Artest fight in the stands, the NBA has been quite proactive about keeping fights under control and the Wizards basically said that they were going to push the limits of this series by hitting LeBron James when he came into the lane.

And this is where the Darius Songaila situation unfolds. The reason that the NBA suspended Songaila was because in their view he threw a punch at another player after the whistle. This is the NBA's definition of fighting. And just look at the replay. Songaila's hand comes up and hits LeBron James in the face after the play. They were tangled a bit, but his hand flies up and hits LeBron.

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Craig Lyndall rants, raves and writes other stuff at FilteringCraig.com and at The Cleveland Sports Curse
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In Defense of the NBA Suspending Darius Songaila
Published: May 05, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Sports
Filed Under: Sports: Basketball
Writer: Craig Lyndall
Craig Lyndall's BC Writer page
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Comments

#1 — May 7, 2008 @ 03:49AM — Mark Kalriess

Songaila should be given the benefit of the doubt, because LeBron always is.

LeBron elbows a Wizards in the face and is given a retroactive flagrant, that the NBA tries to cover up. After Stevenson elbows LeBron in the face the NBA warns the Wizards that any Wizards to make contact with LeBron's face or head would be automatically suspended.

The league's mollycoddling of James is sickening. He gets every ticky-tack foul and hardly ever gets called for his constant charges and carries.

I wish the league would just be up front with it. Spot the Cavs 10 points at the beginning of each game and have each members of the opposing team start with a technical.

#2 — May 7, 2008 @ 08:11AM — FilteringCraig [URL]

The difference is that LeBron never said he was going to hit anyone. LeBron never pre-meditated a shot the way the Wizards seemed to do all series long. The trash talk? Yup. All coming out of the Wizards locker room.

You can claim that LeBron gets every call, it you want. The stats don't really back it up and he takes a lot of contact that doesn't get called. He goes to the line a lot because he has the ball a lot. He gets fouled a lot because he gets double and triple teamed a lot. And of course he gets hammered taking the ball to the hole. But I guess they should just let them play so as not to appear to favor LeBron James.

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