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Lebron James OK with FLOPPING

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  • Lebron James OK with FLOPPING

    INDIANAPOLIS -- LeBron James vehemently denies he's a flopper but openly recognizes it as an effective strategy.

    "Some guys have been doing it for years, just trying to get an advantage," James said Monday in the lead-up to Tuesday's Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. "Any way you can get an advantage over the opponent to help your team win, so be it."

    That position illustrates a friction that's developed over the past two seasons between James' Miami Heat and their current opponent, the Indiana Pacers. It's fair to say the Pacers and the Heat have different views on flopping. One side thinks it's an art and the other a menace.

    The Pacers, who trail the Heat 2-1 in the best-of-seven series, have routinely complained about the Heat's flopping, mostly to referees during games. Before a playoff series between the teams last season, Pacers coach Frank Vogel was fined $15,000 by the NBA for complaining that officials let the Heat players get away with flopping.

    "I think it's well documented. I'm not for flopping," Vogel said.

    In the last round of the playoffs, Chicago Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau accused James of flopping. James shot back at the comments, saying, "I don't need to flop. I play an aggressive game. I don't flop. I've never been one of those guys."

    The accusations against the Heat, however, have continued in this series against the Pacers.

    "People flop all the time," Pacers center Roy Hibbert said. "It's sad to say ... not just against the Heat, throughout the whole season."

    During Game 3 on Sunday, Dwyane Wade appeared to be caught exaggerating contact from the Pacers' Ian Mahinmi when he fell out of bounds after Mahinmi put a hand on Wade's back. Officials did not call a foul on the play, but the clip of the move spread on the Internet as one of the more egregious cases of the maneuver seen in the postseason.

    Any subsequent violations are subject to league discipline. Memphis Grizzlies guard Tony Allen was the fourth player to be issued a fine for flopping during this year's playoffs. and Derek Fisher of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Jeff Pendergraph of the Indiana Pacers and J.R. Smith of the New York Knicks were each assessed a $5,000 fine.

    Still, fines have not seemed to stem the tide. No Heat players were officially warned or fined for flopping during the regular season or in the playoffs.

    "It happens," Wade said. "We would have no NBA possibly if they got rid of all the flopping."

    http://espn.go.com/nba/playoffs/2013...ntage-flopping

  • #2
    flopping makes me sick...i think they should review all 'floppish' plays during breaks and give out technicals after timeouts when they see that someone flopped

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    • #3

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      • #4




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        • #5
          I bet he is ok with it .... he plays with the biggest flopper in the game

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          • #6
            Every team does it. Why put yourself at a disadvantage?

            Refs are always going to be part of the game because you need them to keep the action going at the same time keeping it as fair as possible, but they're only human and some people who take every advantage possible to win play them as much as the game.

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            • #7
              Same thing happens in boxing. People are always going to try to get away with **** over a referee. You can't stop it. That's just how some people compete.

              You either let the opponent gain the upper hand, or you beat them at their own game.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Strictly_UG View Post
                Every team does it. Why put yourself at a disadvantage?

                Refs are always going to be part of the game because you need them to keep the action going at the same time keeping it as fair as possible, but they're only human and some people who take every advantage possible to win play them as much as the game.
                heat do it more than any other team do, certainly much more blatant than most. flopping only makes the game harder to officiate. Excessive flopping only halts the action not keep it going.

                its dishonest and it has no place in the game. that's why the nba is penalizing it now albeit ineffectively and unfairly.

                if the best player in the nba is flopping and being rewarded it sets a bad example and a bad trend for the game.

                Originally posted by Strictly_UG View Post
                Same thing happens in boxing. People are always going to try to get away with **** over a referee. You can't stop it. That's just how some people compete.

                You either let the opponent gain the upper hand, or you beat them at their own game.

                no the same thing does not happen in boxing, not to the extent that it happens in the nba. totally different sports yea you can stop it that's why you get penalized.


                For someone who is an alleged christian, you do and say a lot of unchristian like things.

                i guess that makes you a typical christian.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by DTMB View Post
                  heat do it more than any other team do.


                  The Clippers say hi

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                  • #10
                    LOL at Lebron saying he doesn't flop. Very few flop like Lebron.

                    Lebron used to do this flopping **** that pissed me off where he would whip his head back and start holding his hand to his nose like he's checking for blood, even if he got hit in the leg or something.

                    He still whips his head back, but I don't see him do the check for a nosebleed thing anymore.

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