February 11, 2009 5:36 PM

NBA Suspends 7 Players For Brawl

(AP)  NBA scoring leader Carmelo Anthony was suspended for 15 games Monday and six other players were penalized as commissioner David Stern came down hard on both teams after the Nuggets and Knicks brawled at Madison Square Garden.

Nate Robinson and J.R. Smith each got 10 games, and four other players also were suspended. Stern fined each organization $500,000. But there was no separate penalty for Knicks coach Isiah Thomas, who had warned Anthony not to go into the lane before the mayhem started Saturday night.

It was the NBA's scariest scene since the brawl between Pacers players and Pistons fans two years ago. The league is still recovering from that episode, and Stern made it clear the players must learn to control themselves.

"We're going to go after the players who aren't able to stop," he said during a conference call. "We have set up the goal of eliminating fighting from our game. We haven't eliminated it completely."

Anthony's suspension was the sixth longest in NBA history. Mardy Collins, whose hard foul on Smith sparked the fighting, was suspended six games and Knicks teammate Jared Jeffries will miss four. Also, the Knicks' Jerome James and Denver's Nene were both penalized one game for leaving the bench area during the chaos.

Ten players were ejected after the fight, which started with 1:15 left in Denver's 123-100 victory. The punishments were announced before both teams were to play Monday night — New York at home against Utah; Denver at home against Washington.

It was the NBA's scariest scene since the brawl between Pacers players and Pistons fans in Detroit two years ago.

"I was very disappointed," Stern said. "Clearly, we're not getting through or players in certain circumstances just don't want to be restrained. I would suggest that those players will not have long careers in the NBA."

Stern was especially troubled by the fight between Robinson and Smith that spilled into the stands.

"My concern is actually for the safety of the players and the fans, and when things get out of hand you cannot predict or project where they're going to go," Stern said. "There were certain players who weren't going to allow themselves to be calmed."

There was speculation Thomas would be penalized for his comments to Anthony. Stern acknowledged hearing about it, but said he relied only on "definitive information" when handing out punishments.

But he was clearly annoyed by remarks from Thomas and the Knicks after the game that the problems were caused by the Nuggets still having four starters on the floor late in a blowout. And the fine showed he wants teams to be serious in helping him clean up the game.

"It's a more general message that I'm going to start holding our teams accountable," he said.

Collins prevented Smith from an easy basket by grabbing him by the neck and taking him to the floor. Smith rose and immediately started jawing with Collins, and Robinson jumped in to pull Smith away. Anthony shoved Robinson away, and Robinson and Smith then tumbled into the front row while fighting.

Just as things appeared to be calming down, Anthony threw a hard punch that floored Collins, and Jeffries sprinted from the baseline toward halfcourt in an effort to get at Anthony, but was tackled by a Denver player.

By the time security had finally contained Smith, they were nearly at the opposite end of the court from where the fighting started.

Before Stern talked, the Knicks held their morning shootaround, where Thomas didn't back away from the Knicks' postgame assertions that some of the problems were caused by Denver coach George Karl leaving his starters on the floor too long in a blowout.

"I can't speak for him, but he put his players in a tough position," Thomas said. "I think he put his players in a very bad position."

In Denver, Karl was irate with Thomas. Karl accused Thomas of a "premeditated" act, underscoring his disgust with the New York coach with expletives.

"It was directed by Isiah," he said during a shootaround. "I think his actions after the game were despicable. He made a bad situation worse. I'll swear on my children's life that I never thought about running up the score. I wanted to get a big win on the road."

"My team has had trouble holding leads at the end of games," he added. "I didn't want the score to get under 10 points because if it would've gotten under 10 points it would've had a negative feeling on my team."

Karl has bigger problems now. He'll be without Anthony until the Nuggets' game at Houston on Jan. 20, and Smith will be gone until Jan. 8. That duo combines for more than 48 points a game.

"It's going to be tough," said Nuggets center Marcus Camby, one of the five players ejected who wasn't suspended. "It's already tough being in the Western Conference, and missing guys like J.R. and Carmelo is going to make it even worse."

Anthony's conduct represents a big blow to the player, team and league. He starred as a captain on the U.S. team at the world championships this summer, and had been getting more marketing opportunities as one of the league's brightest young stars.

Stern took none of that into account when issuing his decision.

"We judged him on his actions on the court, period," Stern said. "And they deserved a harsh penalty."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
  • Scott Conroy

    Scott Conroy is a National Political Reporter for RealClearPolitics and a contributor for CBS News.

Add a Comment See all 32 Comments
by osiris031 December 20, 2006 11:23 AM EST


Was this quote unquote fight as serious as the media has made.

This so called brawl was on FOX world news, I've heard the media refer to these guy involved as "animals", "idiots", "how stupid can you be". the list goes on

The league has handed down multiple game suspension and thousands in fines.

Could anybody let me know WHY in the NHL, where fights are far more brutal AND far more freuquent? Nothing is said about the character, personality, or the moral fiber of these players. Not only is nothing about their character said, the media shows highlights and comments on who got the worst end of the fight. Not to mention their not ejected or suspended%u2026 They are put in timeout. And we%u2019re talking about real fight busted noses, knocked out teeth, broken noses and even a broken neck incident. What gives?, is this underlying racism?
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by winsors1 December 19, 2006 1:22 PM EST
I say do a Pete Rose...First "Fine" them, then "Fire" them, and then "BAN" them from Basketball for the rest of their lives....
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by usmcgator December 19, 2006 12:33 PM EST
This is a punishment? Given, the commisioner suspended the players and fined the teams, but that's like sending a kid to the corner for "time-out." I'm sure the players are thinking real hard about it. If this had happend anywhere else, those players would have been arrested and charged with assault. Why are these athletes treated any different than anyone else? Then as insult to injury, the ORGANIZATION is fined a measly $500,000. These players, and teams, make millions of dollars a year, and you think a couple thousand is going to make a difference to them? If you're going to fine someone making that much money you need to add a couple more zero's behind that number. I'm gonna lose no sleep knowing that one of the players won't be able to buy his $100,000 necklace for christams. These players were out out of control and should be punished accordingly, and judicially.
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by politikz December 19, 2006 12:08 PM EST
Why does everyone come down on the NBA so hard, like they are the only athletes that are overpaid, fight ocassionally, and have tons of women? Get over yourselves!! Do I detect jealosy? This goes on in every professional sports league of signifigance in America. Did I just see a player from the Titans stomp on another guy's head with his cleets? Go to cnnsi.com and see the most memorable brawls in recent history and count how many took place in the NBA. People, they are athletes. True, that's not the way to behave and they got punished. What they do on the court does not affect my life or yours. Don't give me the role model *** either. If your kids look up to anyone but their parents, something is wrong. Let's start holding CEOs and politicians to these same standards that you want to impose on basketball players. If you don't like it, don't watch it. I don't think they will care one way or another.
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by gladys_over December 19, 2006 11:26 AM EST
By the way, which "hood" did Bill Romanowski come out of ?
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by gladys_over December 19, 2006 11:24 AM EST
killer139: "Overpaid egotistical hood rats, you can take a man out of the hood but cant' take the hood out of the boy...."

It's a good thing white athletes are so nonviolent.

It really makes for calm and peace in the National Hockey League. I don't think they've ever had a fight there.
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by killer139 December 19, 2006 11:14 AM EST
Overpaid egotistical hood rats, you can take a man out of the hood but cant' take the hood out of the boy.... I can't believe you said "skilled and very special people...." special please how much drugs and ****** do they buy with all the millions they are overpaid to play a hobbie???
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by gladys_over December 19, 2006 9:15 AM EST
George Karl is just jealous of Isiah Thomas' good looks.

Get over it, Coach. We can't all be handsome.
Reply to this comment
by gladys_over December 19, 2006 8:09 AM EST
"...ABNER DOUBLEDAY must be turning over in his grave..." - wayfedup

Dr. James Naismith, you mean.

Abner Doubleday invented baseball.


Reply to this comment
by trueprogress December 19, 2006 5:04 AM EST


You have to give Atheletes a break. They are skilled and very special people with capabilities and responsibilities far above the common person.
Unless you are an NBA star ... don't judge them !

Who are we to judge ?
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