LOS ANGELES: Lakers coach Mike D’Antoni was among a trio of NBA coaches feeling decidedly un-festive this week as Christmas approached with their teams mired in December difficulties.
D’Antoni, whose team has struggled with injuries to superstar Kobe Bryant and veteran point guard Steve Nash among others, didn’t have any sympathy to spare for Lakers fans after the team’s second straight blowout road defeat on Monday night, a 117-90 loss at Phoenix.
The Lakers were coming off a 102-83 loss at Golden State on Saturday. Spanish big man Pau Gasol missed that contest with a respiratory infection.
He returned to the line-up in Phoenix, but exited early after a clash of heads with Suns center Miles Plumlee left him with a bloody cut near his right eye.
“If they’re discouraged, then find another team to root for,” D’Antoni snapped in answer to a reporter’s question on Monday night.
“We’re not going to give up. Are you kidding me? Discouraged? That’s not even fair to these guys.”
Sacramento Kings coach Mike Malone, however, was in no mood to defend his players after they gave up 22 turnovers leading to 29 New Orleans points in a 113-100 loss to the Pelicans in Sacramento on Monday.
“We’re a bad basketball team,” said Malone, whose Kings are 8-19 in his first season at the helm.
“I don’t know if anyone in that locker room is embarrassed, but I’m embarrassed.”
Brooklyn coach Jason Kidd, whose playing days ended just last season, sounded a saddish note as he contemplated his Nets’ latest defeat, a 103-86 rout by the streaking Pacers.
“I think it’s getting very close to just accepting losing,” Kidd said.
“We kind of get comfortable with losing, and we’ve got to make a stand with that, because when things get tough, do we just give in? And most of the time right now, we do.”
However, Monday’s defeat could be a sign of things to come as the Nets played their first game without star center Brook Lopez, the team’s top scorer who could miss the rest of the season with a broken right foot.
Meanwhile, Brooklyn Nets forward Paul Pierce has been fined $15,000 by the National Basketball Association (NBA) for committing a flagrant foul on opposing point guard George Hill during Monday’s game against the Indiana Pacers.
The incident occurred during the third quarter of Brooklyn’s 103-86 loss to Indiana, when Pierce made a “clothesline” tackle on Hill as the Pacers player was going for a lay-up.
Pierce was ejected from the game and the NBA announced his fine on Tuesday, saying that the 10-time All Star had made “excessive and unnecessary contact” with Hill.
However, Hill appeared to defend Pierce, suggesting that in a previous era the foul would not have received such a penalty.
“I think back in the day, hard fouls was good,” Hill told reporters after the game. “So, it was a hard foul, but at the end of the day, don’t let it rattle you and that’s what I thought about.”
A frustrated Pierce shot 0-of-7 from the floor against the Pacers, missing his two three-point attempts, to record only the second scoreless game of his NBA career.
A clothesline tackle refers to when a player extends an arm around an opponent’s neck area.
Agencies