October 7, 2024

Stephen A. Smith called the NBA to see if they’d suspend Russell Westbrook for ‘inexcusable’ play

When the Dallas Mavericks host the LA Clippers for Game 4 of their first-round series in the NBA playoffs on Sunday, Russell Westbrook is going to be in uniform for the Clips, but ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith isn’t so certain he should be.

A little background for any who missed it: Towards the end of Game 3, Westbrook appeared to lose his cool as his team was getting blown out, taking a hard foul on Mavs star Luka Doncic, swinging him around and then shoving him when Luka took exception to it.

Westbrook then shoved Doncic’s teammate P.J. Washington when he went to intervene by shoving Westbrook, elevating Washington to Mavericks folk hero status and internet meme with his completely nonplussed reaction to it:

Both Westbrook and Washington were ejected, but Smith went on ESPN on Sunday to say he wasn’t so sure that was enough. In a rant on Sunday’s broadcast of Knicks-Sixers, Smith admitted he called the league office to try and get an explanation for why they weren’t suspending Westbrook:

That last part is what led some Clippers fans and online Russ stan accounts to accuse Smith of trying to get Westbrook suspended, but that’s not exactly what happened, even if that read is understandable. What it sounds like is that Stephen A. went back to his journalistic, pre-takesman roots to simply get a comment from the league explaining why Westbrook wasn’t being suspended.

That answer from the league? Essentially that this is the playoffs, and it fell short of the suspension standard for them, even if it likely would have reached said bar in the regular season.

The NBA admitting that they have a different standard for suspensions in the playoffs than the regular season is certainly not news to anyone who has watched the postseason before, but it still is sort of eye-popping that they apparently admitted that out loud.

However, the funniest part of this is just the visual of Smith being so appalled by Westbrook’s behavior that he called an NBA spokesperson and demanded an explanation for why he wouldn’t be suspended.

Is this something that happens frequently? How often is Stephen A. calling NBA media relations to ask for explanations on hard fouls? Did he check in on why Joel Embiid is allowed to play in Game 4 after some of his… let’s say controversial… conduct in Knicks-Sixers Game 3? Have they designated a helpline for Stephen A. to check on suspension statuses? Does he have a big red phone in his office with a direct line to Joe Dumars like the Commissioner Gordon to Adam West’s Batman? The people need to know.

It remains to be seen if anything else will come of this, but once Westbrook finds out perhaps my colleagues over at Secret Base will have some material for a “Russell Westbrook vs. Stephen A. Smith” Beef History on their hands. But for now, “Being in a statistical category he only shares with Kendrick Perkins” will have to be enough of a punishment for the Clippers guard:

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