Just saw these.
Alston has got no excuse. That was just brain-dead Alston, which is why he was deemed expendable in...well...pretty much everywhere that has a second option for playing point. 1 Game Suspension.
Fisher also has no excuse. That was simply popping the pick to jar the pick player. While "Streak Deadly" (a friend of mine and Skander's) may disagree, that's cheap. 1 Game Suspension.
Artest/Bryant: This is a case of referee failure. Kobe had Artest blocked out - that's good basketball. Artest decided to push and run him over. That's a foul, and it didn't get called. Bryant retaliated by pushing back. Still no call. Artest keeps pushing...and is winning the battle by doing something that is obviously beyond reasonable. Still no call. Bryant bumps back even harder. Still no call. Artest *STILL* keeps pushing. STILL NO CALL, and now, it's getting serious, because Bryant is getting moved *WAY* too far. Bryant swings the arms - yes, high - and pops Artest.
Had the refs wanted to let a little bit go, clearly, once it got to be an inverse tug-of-war, the double-foul needed to be called. But they didn't do that. As a result, that was just a ridiculous exchange that I lay *COMPLETELY* at the feet of the referees.
If I'm Stu Jackson, after announcing my resignation for the good of basketball, I send a message to Bryant: the league has upgraded that call to a Flagrant-1 on Kobe, and has fined him an equal amount to Ron Artest. And now, back to basketball.
Kobe's elbow needs to be addressed, but shouldn't warrant a suspension unless such plays continue. Artest does not deserve a suspension, but I do agree with a technical foul due to his behavior. The only reason he got thrown out is past incidents - and I'm okay with that. And finally, I fine the referee crew for allowing that kind of escalation.
I somewhat agree with WayOut that this is playoff basketball, and that the lane is not a safe place for the faint-of-heart. But that was just a bit too over-the-top.
And finally, if I'm Kobe Bryant in that situation...*I* throw that elbow. (Given my height, and my block-out stance, it will be at a significantly lower but still at a vulnerable part of the body.) But I think Kobe *HAS* to throw that elbow given what was transpiring. He wasn't aiming it at any place in particular; not that that's an excuse. It's still got to be punished, but the referees need to share in that blame.