Players behaving badly....

Warhawk

Give blood and save a life!
Staff member
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3194819

ATLANTA -- Chicago Bulls rookie Joakim Noah was benched for Sunday's 105-84 loss to the Atlanta Hawks -- by his teammates.
They delivered a unanimous vote after the rookie from Florida was involved in a confrontation with assistant coach Ron Adams in practice before Friday's game at Philadelphia.
Noah was inactive for the Philadelphia game for internal disciplinary reasons, but the players told interim coach Jim Boylan one game was not enough.
"We have a chance to salvage this season and we just need everybody on the page," said Bulls veteran guard Adrian Griffin.
"It's one of those things that I believe is going to bring us closer.
"Everyone on this team knows what Joakim can do and we just look forward to getting him back on the court."
Noah, who is averaging 4.2 points and 3.1 rebounds in 12.3 minutes, sat behind the Bulls bench, wearing street clothes.
"They just told me what I did was unacceptable and I'm just going to move on from here," Noah said before the game. "I've just got to accept it. What do you want me to say? I've just got to move on. There's nothing I can do about it."
When asked if he believes the two-game suspension is too severe, Noah said "Ask the players who made the decision. I don't know. ... Do I agree with it? It doesn't make a difference. I respect my teammates."
Boylan, promoted to head coach on Dec. 27 after Scott Skiles was fired, said the suspension resulted from more than one incident.
Boylan called Noah "a great kid," but noted he's been involved in "a couple of situations where he's been late or not doing what the Chicago Bulls do. So the cumulative aspect of this is definitely part of the reasoning for the players doing what they did."
"This isn't college anymore," Boylan said. "It's the NBA. This is professional sports."
He said the team felt Noah needed to sit another game.
"They felt it deserved more," Boylan said. "It was the entire team that felt that way, so I back my team and the decision that they made, and appreciate the leadership that they've shown."
Atlanta rookie Al Horford, who played with Noah at Florida, called the ninth pick in the draft "very emotional" and "very competitive."
"I just feel it's a learning experience for everyone in general," Horford said. "If you cross a line in something like that, there's consequences to it. ... He wants to win really bad. I think people will figure him out as time goes on."

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3196522


CLEVELAND -- LeBron James acknowledged driving 101 mph on the highway on his 23rd birthday, and gave no assurance he wouldn't go that fast again.
The Cleveland Cavaliers superstar was ticketed by the State Highway Patrol on Interstate 71 in suburban Medina at nearly 3 a.m. on Dec. 30. He was driving in a 65 mph zone, and the patrol said it's the first time James was ticketed.
"I was doing 101," James said Monday after practice. "That's it. I was speeding. I've just got to abide by the law. I got caught. It happens."
Lawyer Colin Jennings filed a not guilty plea for James in Medina Municipal Court. A hearing is scheduled for Feb. 11, when the Cavaliers play in Orlando.
When James was asked if he will continue traveling at such speed, he said: "I don't know, maybe at times. It's not a big deal to me. You've just got to abide by the rules that's all. I made a mistake and I'll live with it."
James said he was heading home after the team arrived in Cleveland from New Orleans, where they had lost to the Hornets a few hours earlier.
"I'm not going to jail or nothing like that,'' he said. "I wasn't drunk. I was just speeding. That's it."
 
This ain't the autobahn, LeBron. ;)

As for Noah, I don't know if some of his teammates are misconstruing his "bad" attitude with his desire to win, seen during his Florida days. It seems like some of them are trying to equate them together, but as none of us are in the loop, it seems like his antics went over the top.
 
This ain't the autobahn, LeBron. ;)

As for Noah, I don't know if some of his teammates are misconstruing his "bad" attitude with his desire to win, seen during his Florida days. It seems like some of them are trying to equate them together, but as none of us are in the loop, it seems like his antics went over the top.
If your entire team thinks you've behaved poorly, I doubt they've "misconstrued" anything.

As for LeBron, he says you have to "abide by the law," but then he says he may drive that fast again "at times." :eek: As far as saying he wasn't drunk, "just" speeding...WTF? Driving 101 MPH is just as dangerous for other people on the road as driving drunk, unless it's driving drunk and 101 MPH. :rolleyes: Hopefully, if he crashes at that speed he only kills himself.:mad:
 
i think it was middle of the night and he was trying to get home fast not that that excuses anything but i dont think it is as severe as some people think even i have 100mph+ a bunch of times if highway is clear
 
I don't know Ohio law, but CA law with Sacramento County fines, going over 100 is 1741.00 + a 30 day suspension of the drivers license. The suspension is not mandatory, but generally asked for by the DA's.

If Ohio is anything like CA, Lebron will just pay his fine and be back out on the street. Had he been charged with a reckless, that would have been different, but what he did probably didn't rise to the level of willful disregard for the safety of the public (CA law).
 
I don't know Ohio law, but CA law with Sacramento County fines, going over 100 is 1741.00 + a 30 day suspension of the drivers license. The suspension is not mandatory, but generally asked for by the DA's.

If Ohio is anything like CA, Lebron will just pay his fine and be back out on the street. Had he been charged with a reckless, that would have been different, but what he did probably didn't rise to the level of willful disregard for the safety of the public (CA law).


You don't think driving 101 on a public road is willful disregard for public safety????
 
i think it was middle of the night and he was trying to get home fast not that that excuses anything but i dont think it is as severe as some people think even i have 100mph+ a bunch of times if highway is clear

Then you're a fool. Do you have an idea what happens to a car if, for example, a tire blows at 100+ mph? I certainly hope when you're putting your life on the line no one else is in the car.
 
i think it was middle of the night and he was trying to get home fast not that that excuses anything but i dont think it is as severe as some people think even i have 100mph+ a bunch of times if highway is clear


Dude, you need to improve your decision making skillz.
 
You don't think driving 101 on a public road is willful disregard for public safety????


It doesn't matter what I think, it matters what I can prove. As a guy who spends 3 days a week at traffic court working for the DA's office prosecuting just these sorts of crimes I can tell you that going over 100 by itself generally does not rise to the level of reckless driving under the California Vehicle Code. We've tried, we lose those cases where it is a dude going 101 at 1 a.m. Is it smart? No. But being stupid is just one prerequisite for reckless driving.


Driving over 100 is 22348(b) of the CA vehicle code. Reckless is VC 23103 if you are interested. Again, this is just CA law. I have no idea what Ohio is.
 
Last edited:
Bulls rookie Curry arrested for urinating in public, resisting arrest

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3201750

BOISE, Idaho -- Chicago Bulls rookie JamesOn Curry has been arrested in Boise and charged with misdemeanor counts of urinating in public and resisting arrest.
Police arrested Curry early Thursday morning and took him to the Ada County Jail. He was released a few hours later after posting $600 bond.
Curry has until February 7 to make a plea, and then must be in Boise again for either a jury trial or sentencing.
The 6-foot-3 Curry is a guard and second-round draft pick of the Bulls last year. The 22-year-old has been assigned to the Bulls' NBA Development League team, the Iowa Energy.
All 14 of the league's teams have been in Boise this week taking part in the NBA D-League Showcase.
 
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3201750

BOISE, Idaho -- Chicago Bulls rookie JamesOn Curry has been arrested in Boise and charged with misdemeanor counts of urinating in public and resisting arrest.
Police arrested Curry early Thursday morning and took him to the Ada County Jail. He was released a few hours later after posting $600 bond.
Curry has until February 7 to make a plea, and then must be in Boise again for either a jury trial or sentencing.
The 6-foot-3 Curry is a guard and second-round draft pick of the Bulls last year. The 22-year-old has been assigned to the Bulls' NBA Development League team, the Iowa Energy.
All 14 of the league's teams have been in Boise this week taking part in the NBA D-League Showcase.

In other words: big dumb kid got drunk.

Part of the problem here is that kids enter the league so young that basically we get to see all the sutpid *** things that people do in college, except broadcast on worldwide media.
 
When James was asked if he will continue traveling at such speed, he said: "I don't know, maybe at times. It's not a big deal to me. You've just got to abide by the rules that's all. I made a mistake and I'll live with it."
James said he was heading home after the team arrived in Cleveland from New Orleans, where they had lost to the Hornets a few hours earlier.
"I'm not going to jail or nothing like that,'' he said. "I wasn't drunk. I was just speeding. That's it."
I can't believe he made it sound like speeding is OK to do...that's horrible.:eek:
 
Heh, ok now tsk tskers -- 100mph is stupid. Been there maybe once (might have been twice because I recall a dumb incident with a girl once that was...well, dumb, but anyway...), and yes I was young and appropriately stupid and did it just to say I'd done it once. But at the point we are reduced to decrying "he made it sound like speeding is ok!" I'm betting there are a WHOLE bunch of pots calling the kettle black around here (not that speeding is a good thing, just that it is one so prevalent its like complaining about people drinking coffee). Now if the objection is "he made it sound like driving 100mph is okay", that's a much more reasonable complaint (given that it is borderline reckless behavior anyplace but the autobahn).
 
Last edited:
I think my problem with his comments is the "it's no big deal to me" part of his statement. Yes, I think anyone who's had a car whose speedometer had 140 on it has, at some point in time, tried to see if they can "peg it"... But most people I know at least are aware it's illegal and dangerous and not something you really want to dismiss as "no big deal."

But it is just speeding. Considering some of the things players are being caught doing nowadays, this is a "stand in the corner" thing comparatively.
 
I got ticketed for 104 down Sunrise near Mather AFB :( Was a dumb thing to do because I was mad.. Will never make that mistake again. Hard not to because I drive a fast car heh, but I will keep it at the track.

Kids, don't drive fast! My ticket cost me $1776 and a month w/o a license. :mad:
 
I got busted at 103 mph. Luckily I was slowing down from 140. The cop said he should get me for reckless but since I seemed very in control of my car he cut me a break. Then when I went to court the judge threatened me but eventually cujt me another break and reduced it to just speeding over 64mph and I only got a fine of $300.

Dont worry that was when I was young and had been driving for like a year. I know better now. I keep it around 90........just kidding just kidding!
 
Back
Top