On a side note, why wasn't Mavs owner Cuban fined when he told his players to throw the ball at Bruce Bowen's face?? He told the players he would pay their fine for them.Bruce Bowen has had a belly-full of it.
Mavericks coach Don Nelson's outbursts -- first in post-game interviews Friday, then in Sunday's Dallas Morning News -- accused the San Antonio Spurs forward of dirty play. It's the third time this season an opponent has made such remarks.
"It's really motivated me to the point where (if) you thought I was tenacious before, it's going to a whole new level. Because that's the only way I can get my piece out," Bowen said in a telephone interview Monday night.
Nelson told the Morning News he was disappointed Bowen wasn't suspended for what the coach believes was a dirty play.
"You can put me down now as one of the many who have called him dirty," Nelson told the newspaper. "I've never cast an aspersion toward Bruce Bowen -- but he's a dirty player. And I'll remember it. I'm shocked he wasn't suspended."
Both Bowen and Michael Finley were called for fouls after exchanging elbows in the Spurs' 113-100 win over Dallas. Finley and Nelson were ejected for arguing the call.
Earlier this season, Vince Carter and Ray Allen each said that Bowen was deliberately playing outside the rules.
Monday, Bowen fired back. He said that Finley initiated the contact that led to his forearm jab into Finley's chest.
"I got it on tape," Bowen said. "Everyone thinks I hauled off and hit him. But I wouldn't say that to you if I didn't have it on tape. ... In hindsight, was it right for me to retaliate? No. But when you throw the first punch, I'm gonna hit you back. It's just making me go to a whole different level."
Bowen said that he is concerned officials will assume the worst about him after the public criticism.
"It makes me want to say to the officials, 'If you heard what's going on, that's not the case and that's not what's happening,' " he said. "After Vince said what he did, I decided I'm just gonna keep doing what I do. Now I'm going to take it to another level of intensity, moving my feet, showing my hands, so the officials can see what (the offensive players) are doing to draw a foul. Just like I'm back in high school ... show your hands."
Finley told the News on Monday that Bowen was fined an unspecified amount by the league, and the fine represented a modicum of justice.
"Obviously, the league saw what happened before my retaliation," Finley told the paper. "I'll turn the other cheek, for now."
David Aldridge is an NBA analyst for ESPN.
WAAAAAA!!!