Thursday, 11 April 2013

L.A. Clippers Fake Rumors About Locker-Room Friction

Since they are not having it, don't decide to try some of he said, she said, they all said tomfoolery on the Los Angeles Clippers. Any of it. Reports had appeared that Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan were at odds and that both were rising irritated with Chris Paul. By "reports," I'm particularly discussing one reporter for the Los Angeles TimesAwho broke the story and shall remain nameless. Yes, right. The writer in question is T.J. Simers, who wrote the following: The feel-good Clippers are gone, withADeAndre JordanAandABlake Griffin's immaturity dragging the group down. Jordan needs nothing regarding CoachAVinny Del Negro when he blames Del Negro for burying him on the table. ... On the table words were exchanged by the other night in Sacramento, Griffin and Jordan. Griffin told Jordan he best never again stare him down as he did when Griffin failed to give Jordan a good move for a dunk. Everybody else was left to stay there while looking forward to the youngsters to stop bickering. The couple also have developed tired ofAChris Paul's voice, that will be clear sometimes. Paul, quite definitely likeAKobe BryantAa' who has made offADwight HowardAwith his out-of-this-world standards a' is constant. He never ends up. And Jordan and Griffin are becoming tired of him. It sure seems like the Clippers involve some problems on their hands, doesn't it? Griffin and Jordan be seemingly just two doofy, over-sized kiddies who will not develop, and Los Angeles ' star point guard is currently being compared to among the best people the NBA has ever seen in Kobe Bryant. The tension could be cut by you with a knife. Can't you only style the hate here? Did I say "tension?" I meant applesauce. Applesauce? Applesauce. That is how bonkers this looks. The Clippers have been rewarded for their off-court chemistry all season, and Paul himself has stated he believes the group has been so successful because of their chemistry, perhaps not in spite of it. And we are supposed to think that there is problems within the locker room? Puh-lease. Times 50. Anyone who has seen the participants communicate and watched this team can tell their interactions together are not a major problem. There is some miscommunication occasionally throughout games, wayward choices and, apparently, some minor scuffles, nevertheless they are a cohesive group. Both on to the floor and off it. So cohesive, actually, that the Clippers staged a scripted argument that wasn't an argument at all. It absolutely was rather supposed to quell rumors of their psychological demise (via Vincent Bonsignore of the Press-Telegram ): Clippers center DeAndre Jordan shouted throughout the locker area Sunday to Chris Paul. "I don't as if you, Chris," Jordan screamed out. Henry did not flinch. "I don't care," Paul answered. Meanwhile, Clippers forward Blake Griffin turned to Jordan, whose locker is near his, and snipped: "Get out of my way DeAndre. Move," Griffin shouted. Jordan didn't back. "I don't as you, Blake Griffin," Jordan screamed. Eventually, all three people shared a hearty laugh. Had they been serious, possibly the Clippers would be in deep applesauce difficulty. Like friends do, however they were kidding. Nearly as if they (gasp) like one another. Go figure. A group in the midst of fighting for a titlea'that also previously snagged 17 successive victories and set a franchise record for victories in one seasona'that actually likes one another. It's a difficult idea to understand, I am aware. But let us take to. Just look at all of this central friction... No doubt Jordan probably is not excited about finding herself on the seat in the most crucial of circumstances. Who'd be? Participants who would like to, you understand, actually play do not plead their coaches to spend time on the counter, particularly in the last quarter. Before he harbors any uncertain animosity toward mind instructor Vinny Del Negro but when Jordan really wants to play when the game is on the line, he must increase upon that 39.1 percent foul-shooting show of his. Seriously, Jordan's is really a mark that makes Dwight Howard seem as intelligent from the free-throw line as Stephen Curry. As far as Griffin being fully a son or daughter, well, he is only 24. I have observed "kids" older than him do worse than argue with a teammate throughout the heat of battle. And what's wrong with just a little inner jawing? Certainly, it's perhaps not great, but often it may be productive.AKobe and Shaquille O'Neal argued their way toward three titles and look how that ended up. OK, not the best case. But look at Dwyane Wade and Erik Spoelstra. They have had tiffs before, the Miami Heat are the reigning NBA champions, and they are still cohabiting. Some thing tells me the Clippers is going to be fine.Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports Paul being annoying, though? That is incredible. It is irreversible. It is, well, normal. I would maybe not get so far as to say that he could be the Black Mamba. I honestly couldn't imagine him wondering Howard's toughness or requiring Metta World Peace right back from injury monthly early (I am therefore kidding about that one) the way in which Kobe has. Still, leaders push buttons; they push their teammates. That's they are joba'to make those around them better. If that includes moving on some toes, fracturing some egos and depriving the "kids" of dessert after wins, then so be it. "I have to focus on being truly a greater leader," Paul said when questioned about being "annoying" (via Simers). He, Griffin and Jordan should also perform a better job of hating each other. Because they are terrible at it. AllAstats used in this short article were created from Basketball-Reference unless otherwise noted.

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