Draymond Green is no stranger to high-profile playoff bans.
I have earned another on Sunday. For a half, at least.
the Golden State forward was ejected on Sunday on a controversial flagrant 2 foul. But the Warriors rallied in his absence from him for a thrilling 117-116 win to take a 1-0 lead over the memphis grizzlies in Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinal series.
The game came down to a final shot by Memphis guard Ja Morant, who’s piled up a career’s worth of highlights in his three-year NBA stint. But this one didn’t fall for the Grizzlies guard, whose layup at the buzzer bounced off the backboard without touching the rim.
Klay misses, ref indecision sets up wild final seconds
The Grizzlies earned the final possession thanks to a bizarre set of circumstances led to a jump ball in the game’s final seconds. The Warriors had a chance to take a three-point lead with Klay Thompson at the free throw line with 6.7 seconds remaining in the game. But the career 84.9% free throw shooter missed both shots, and the ball bounced out of bounds after neither team was able to corral the rebound on his second miss.
Officials couldn’t decide who touched the ball last and called for a jump ball at center court with 4.8 seconds remaining. Neither team had a challenge remaining, and NBA officials are no longer permitted to initiate a replay review on an out of bounds call in the game’s final two minutes.
The Grizzlies won the jump ball and called timeout to call the final play that set up Morant for his layup attempt.
Controversial Draymond ejection
Green drew a whistle for a foul late in the second quarter in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals against Memphis. Grizzlies forward Brandon Clark jumped for a layup in the lane as Green contested. Green grabbed his jersey, and Clark fell to the court, prompting the whistle.
As officials reviewed the play to determine what level of foul to assess, Grizzlies fans chanted “throw him out.”
Throw him out, they did. Officials assessed Green a flagrant 2 foul on the play, which meant an automatic ejection. Green got word of the ejection before officials announced it to the broadcast crew. He responded with a mock victory lap taunting the Grizzlies crowd before running to the Warriors bench to dap up his teammates. He then skipped to the locker room.
Flagrant 2 explained
Green attempted to brace Clarke’s fall on the play, and social media and the ESPN broadcast crew speculated that he would draw a flagrant 1 foul — a designation that doesn’t come with an ejection. The more serious infraction arrived as a surprise. Another replay angle appears to tell the story.
Prior to the jersey grab with his left hand, Green swiped Clarke across the face with his right.
The combination of the swipe and the jersey grab led to his ejection.
“After review, the foul has been upgraded to a flagrant foul penalty 2,” referee Kane Fitzgerald announced after the replay review. “Draymond Green has been ejected for the windup to the face, impact to the face, the follow-through to the jersey and the throw-down to the ground.”
Memphis led, 54-53 at the time of the foul with 1:18 remaining in the quarter. It extended its lead to 61-55 heading into halftime before the Warriors rallied in the second half.
Green’s flagrant 2 puts him on the cusp of a suspension based on the NBA’s cumulative flagrant foul system. A flagrant 2 foul earns a player two points in the system, where more than three points in the postseason earns a player a one-game ban. That means another flagrant 2 or two more flagrant 1 fouls will earn Green a one-game suspension.