I'm curious how many of you have played orginized sports in front of a large audience. First off, you forget that the audience is there. Your focus is entirely on what your doing, and if it wasn't, and you were paying attention to the audience,you wouldn't be performing to your potential. Having said that, I don't know of any athlete worth his salt, that hasn't gotten into the face of some teammate at one time or another, or had a teammate get in his face. We all make mistakes, and in the heat of the moment, either you, or your teammate is going to verbalize personal dissatification. 99% of the time, it means nothing, and it ends right there.
Thats not to say that if a particular teammate continues to make the same mistake over and over again, that it can't grow into something more than just a single incident. There are times when I think Brooks plays very well. There are other times when he appears to have the interests of just one player in mind, himself! Recently he appears to have discovered tunnel vision, and oddly enough, it seems to coincide with his ending up in the second unit. I remember in the game before last when he came in, he drove the ball down the floor and made pass across the entire court to Jimmer, who couldn't get the shot off because he was covered too quickly. After that, wherever Jimmer was on the court, the ball went the other way, and he only touched the ball one time after that. Does that mean he doesn't like Jimmer? Or does it mean that he simply got tunnel vision, and couldn't see him, or even think about him.
In the video above, I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. Cousins was being fronted, and he just may have decided to avoid a potential turnover and passed the ball the other way. On TV, you could see that the right pass would have left Cousins a clear path to the basket. But maybe if your just 5'11" you can't see what we could see. My suggestion is to not make too much of this. Things always get said in the heat of the moment during a game. I know I've said things, and after the game, I can't even remember what I said, and in most cases, neither can the person I said them too. One thing you'll hear a lot of on any team is, "My Bad".