Kings notes: Artest steams over Bowen's style

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Kings notes: Artest steams over Bowen's style of defense
By Sam Amick -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PDT Thursday, April 6, 2006


SAN ANTONIO - Bruce Bowen isn't making many friends these days.
First, the San Antonio small forward and renowned defensive player kicked Seattle's Ray Allen in the back recently, furthering what already was a heated rivalry.

Then during the Kings' 97-87 upset of the Spurs at the AT&T Center on Wednesday night, Bowen upset the one player who would seem most capable of understanding him.

If Ron Artest is crying foul about defense, something must be awry. And while the Kings' small forward clarified that he and Bowen remain on good terms, he said Bowen's tactics were nothing short of bad play.

"Bruce Bowen was smacking me the whole game," said Artest, who had 15 points, six rebounds, three steals and two blocks. "I couldn't believe it. He was just smacking me. I was like, that's not even legal. That's why I'm the Defensive Player of the Year. That's why. Because I play good defense. No gimmicks."

The two were cordial before tipoff, standing side by side while chatting about perceived injustices of the past.

"I love Bruce," Artest said. "I told him me and him should have been Defensive Player of the Year. (Detroit's) Ben Wallace already stole it from me three times."

While Wallace has won in three of the past four seasons, Bowen never has received the award. When Artest won in the 2003-04 season, some claimed that Bowen was the more deserving pick, leading Artest to tell the media that perhaps the two should square off in a game of one-on-one to decide the prize. Artest won the latest matchup, holding Manu Ginobili to eight points on 3-for-8 shooting.

Early lobbying - For as much as the Kings claimed this was not a message sent to the Spurs, Artest - who was called for a technical foul in the second quarter - had a message of his own for the officials.

"The players are working hard, trying to entertain the crowd and do good for the NBA, (so) I think the referees got to work a little bit harder on looking at the calls," Artest said. "Hopefully, going into the playoffs, the referees could improve a little bit, because I know the players are going to try to improve, make it fun for the fans, and I just think it just needs to be a good effort on the referees' part also."

Take Two - Bonzi Wells was rewarded for his hard work this time.
One night after scoring 30 points in the 26-point loss to Dallas, the Kings' shooting guard had 19 points on 8-for-13 shooting, six rebounds and five steals. His lone block set the defensive tone in the first quarter, as he soared against the glass to stuff 6-foot-10 Spurs center Nazr Mohammed.

About the writer: The Bee's Sam Amick can be reached at (916) 326-5582 or samick@sacbee.com.
 
"The players are working hard, trying to entertain the crowd and do good for the NBA, (so) I think the referees got to work a little bit harder on looking at the calls," Artest said. "Hopefully, going into the playoffs, the referees could improve a little bit, because I know the players are going to try to improve, make it fun for the fans, and I just think it just needs to be a good effort on the referees' part also."

Am I the only one waiting to see if the league office takes action against Ron for that comment? I hope/know it shouldn't happen, but my first thought was how ironic would it be for Artest to get slapped with a fine for his statement when Shaq's recent comments were kind of swept under the carpet...
 
No Ron. Do NOT join the grand Kings complain about the officials trend. You're under a microscope as it is.
 
I think you're being too hard on Ron. I think the comments were right on target... if the league does anything in response to those comments I'm personally going to start a email blitz about the travesty between that and what Shaquille O'Neal said recently.

Artest said he hopes the officials step up their effort going into the playoffs just as the players will. Artest may be under a microscope but he's not doing anything close to the complaining some of our team has been guilty of in the past.

He's gonna speak his mind and, quite frankly, I'd rather he did than to watch him remain totally silent, with things brewing under the surface.

I was really worried about him coming here, and I have no way of knowing for sure if he'll end up shooting us and himself in the foot. But as long as he's doing his job - and lord is he - on the court, then I think we go with the flow. I'd much rather see Ron Artest as himself (on meds or self-control or whatever) than a Stepford NBA player.

;)
 
I'm not being hard on Ron. I'm just being smart for Ron.

Just because we in Kingsland have embraced him and magically forgotten his past does not mean that the rest of the NBA has. This is a player who apparently was called into David Stern's office on more than one occassion and given a tongue-lashing by the Big Man himself. A lifetime ban was apparently considered. Ron has done well here precisely by keeping his head down. Playing. Not screwing around with the refs, other players, fans whatever. It would be incredibly foolish for him to in ANY way tweak the refs, some of whom may already be inclined to think he's unstable. If you're Ron, you simply cannot give the refs any excuse to remember who you are.

I agree the statement itself was mild as these things go -- ambiguous even, which of course fits the speaker. But it was still a complaint. And unfortunately with the particular complainer anything/everything gets amplified in more hallowed NBA halls than these.
 
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