On January 6, Beijing time, the Lakers vs. Grizzlies game went into the third quarter with 6 minutes and 24 seconds left. After James stole jjj, the two fell to the ground to pounce on the ball. The referee did not whistle the penalty, and Grizzlies coach Jenkins rushed in angrily. In the infield, he slapped the referee.
Jenkins believed that James committed a foul by stealing 3j's ball, but the referee did not whistle the ball. He was very dissatisfied with the ball. He first opened his hand towards the referee to hinder the Lakers' fast break.
Then Jenkins spat at the referee. The referee then watched the replay, and the replay showed that James did not hit 3j's head, but 3j pulled James' arm, and 3j was pretending to be in pain.
It is very clear from this angle in the replay. If a foul is to be called, it should be called a 3j obstruction foul for the Lakers fast break, because he has been pulling James' arm, and James did not hit 3j at all. Jenkins' rage on this ball only resulted in a technical foul.
espn reporter Dave McMenamin wrote: Jenkins just lost his mind because of a collision between LeBron and 3J. He rushed into the court and blocked the Lakers' fast break. He also kept spraying at the referee, and his assistant held him until he stopped. It's surprising that such a move comes with only a T.
nba reporter Sean Davis also said that Jenkins did extra defense to hinder the Lakers' fast break.
Sun reporter greg beacham wrote: The Grizzlies coach lost his mind because of a call for an out-of-control ball. He entered the court to block Prince's fast break and tried to conflict with the referee. He was not ejected?
Los Angeles Times reporter Dan Walker wrote: I have never seen a coach make so many mistakes and not be ejected, even if he was right but it turned out he was not.
text/Yan Xiaobai’s basketball dream