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A game that had all the makings of a fantastic playoff type battle was marred by a serious head injury to DeWanna Bonner and then an apparent retaliation by Diana Taurasi.
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According to an official league source, Diana Taurasi’s technical foul on Jessica Davenport has been upgraded to a Flagrant 2 and she was assessed an undisclosed fine. She will not be suspended.
Taurasi broke Davenport’s nose with an elbow thrown with about 3 minutes remaining in Sunday’s game against the Indiana Fever.
There was no additional penalty assessed to Shavonte Zellous for her hit on DeWanna Bonner that sent Bonner to the hospital.
Considering league precedent, this seems like a fair ruling to me.
Here is the official definition of a flagrant foul:
B. FOULS: FLAGRANT-UNSPORTSMANLIKE
To be unsportsmanlike is to act in a manner unbecoming to the image of professional
basketball. It consists of acts of deceit, disrespect of officials and profanity.The penalty for such action is a technical foul. Repeated acts shall result in
expulsion from the game and potentially a fine.A flagrant foul-penalty (1) is unnecessary contact committed by a player
against an opponent.A flagrant foul-penalty (2) is unnecessary and excessive contact committed
by a player against an opponent. It is an unsportsmanlike act and the offender is
ejected following confirmation by instant replay review.The offender will be subject to a fine and/or suspension by the President.
Looks like my initial diagnosis was correct after all. When I saw Davenport on the court, I thought for sure her nose was broken but after the game in the locker room she said it wasn’t.
Turns out it was, according to this press release from the Indiana Fever.
No word yet on the any action from the league regarding either incident in the game.
LOS ANGELES – Indiana Fever center Jessica Davenport sustained a broken nose during the fourth quarter of Sunday’s 104-82 road victory over the Phoenix Mercury. Davenport will wear a protective mask for approximately four weeks, beginning Tuesday when the Eastern Conference-leading Fever battles the Los Angeles Sparks in a nationally televised game on ESPN2 (10:00 p.m. ET).
With 3:20 remaining in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game and the Fever leading 93-77 in a rematch of last year’s WNBA Finals, Davenport absorbed the blow from the right elbow of Mercury star Diana Taurasi who was coming off a screen and driving to the basket. Davenport was whistled for a foul on the play. Taurasi was assessed a technical foul. Davenport left the game with 15 points and seven rebounds.
According to a team announcement, Bonner has been released from the hospital with a mild concussion and will be reevaluated day-to-day.
With about 1:25 left in the third quarter, Fever guard Shavonte Zellous drove for a layup and collided with Mercury forward DeWanna Bonner. The replays aren't exceptionally clear but as Zellous went up she can be seen swinging her left arm out which connects with Bonner across the face. The Fever were up 70 to 66 when the incident occurred.
DeWanna landed on her feet and immediately crumpled to the ground. She did not hit her head on the floor. She was moving at first and in the replay you can clearly see a point where she losses conciseness. She remained motionless for about 30 full seconds as the silent crowd looked on and my own nearly four-year-old daughter sitting in the stands with my family cried in fear.
The medical staff immobilized her head and strapped her to a backboard before taking her off the court on a stretcher. She was taken to a local hospital for evaluation. No further word on her condition has been received although she waived to the crowd while being wheeled off.
On the play, Bonner was called for a foul and Zellous for a technical foul. The two teams' coaches had much different opinions of what happened.
Coach Gaines could barely hide the disdain in his voice, "I thought it was an offensive foul with the elbow but the ref explained to me the 'correct' call which was, not a split second, a quarter of second, no faster than a quarter of a second, let's go a millennium of a second after she (Zellous) was fouled she put her arm out and got an offensive foul. So it was like, light speed."
Coach Dunn saw things a different way and only wanted to talk about the other incident in this game (which we will get to), "As far I was concerned there was only one incident. Zellous didn't do anything to Bonner. Bonner lost her balance and came down and hit her head.
"The reason I say that is I trust my player. I know Zellous. If she'd hit her she would have said, 'Coach, I hit her but I didn't mean to. Or coach, I threw the arm up but I didn't realize I was going to hit her'. She said, 'I did not touch her'. So I trust my players and that's all I'm going to go on that."
In watching the play numerous times, I think the official got the call right.
Bonner jumps and makes contact with her body and then Zellous swings her left arm out and connects with the side of Bonner's face. I was told that DeWanna had a gash on the inside of her upper lip. In the replay we can see her head snap to the side.
Coach Gaines obviously felt that it should have just been an offensive foul and Coach Dunn was frankly, just making things up since Bonner's head never came close to hitting the ground until well after she had been injured.
The official, as you can see in this image is in perfect position to see the play.
Of course, they easily could have just called Bonner for the foul and not called anything on Zellous. Calling her for the technical foul showed the official felt there was some intent. It is very difficult to judge a play like this from the camera angle.
If it was intentional, it certainly wasn't anything more than a player clearing space while in the air which is fairly common. Unfortunately, the elbow connects with Bonner at just the right place that it knocked her cold as you can see in this image.
At that point in the game, both teams were right in it. Neither had been able to get separation and Coach Gaines was saving his most effective line-up and formation for the fourth quarter. The Mercury have been closing games with Taurasi running point along with Taylor, Bonner, Smith and Dupree.
Unfortunately, the injury not only knocked out Bonner but it took the Mercury out of the game as well.
In the immediate minutes when play resumed the Mercury were clearly fired up and playing with an extremely high-level of passion and ferocity but that emotion wore of and they lost focus and let the game slip away.
"It stopped the game," Penny Taylor said about the incident. "I feel like we had them on the run a little bit. We had them tired."
Both Taylor and Coach Gaines agreed that there was also an emotional toll seeing a beloved teammate being taken off the court on a stretcher and having to play the game not knowing what her status is.
Taurasi retaliates
With just over three minutes to play and the Mercury down by 17 points, Taurasi appeared to take revenge on behalf of her teammate.
She drove to the basket and Fever center Jessica Davenport reached in and fouled Taurasi. While driving, Taursi fully extended her elbow and connected with Davenport's nose. Jessica was bleeding profusely and was taken out of the game.
Taurasi was called for a technical foul.
The replay of this incident is very clear as seen in this image.
After the game there was a scheduled charity auction which kept the Mercury players from being interviewed. I waited for the auction to end and was able to speak with Penny Taylor but was told that Taurasi was unavailable due to another engagement.
Note: Taylor's game-worn pink uniform and a pair of shoes sold for $7,000 while Taurasi's sold for $12,500. The money goes to the Susan G. Komen For The Cure Foundation.
It certainly seems that the team was trying to protect Diana by keeping her from answering questions about the incident which will surely be reviewed by the league. It appears to be an offense worthy of suspension but then again, Cappie Pondexter wasn't suspended for her blatant hit a few weeks ago despite being ejected from the game with a Flagrant Two.
Once again, the two coaches saw things differently.
Fever coach Lin Dunn, "I thought it was a flagrant foul. I thought it was unnecessary. I think anytime you throw that elbow up like that it needs to be called.
"I know what happens when players get frustrated when they're down but you just need to be careful that you don't hurt somebody. It's OK to play hard and physical but don't let your frustration cause you to do something you really regret doing and I think maybe, I'm just guessing, Diana was frustrated and she just took it out a little bit as she drove in for the layup."
Coach Gaines didn't see it that way. In fact, he didn't see much at all, "I was away from that one, I didn't see."
Although he did see this, "I thought she (Taurasi) got fouled. She got grabbed and then, you'll have to ask them. Too quick for me. I'm not that good. I don't have that skill."
This is what coaches do. They protect their players. I would expect nothing less from either one.
I was able to speak very briefly with Davenport in the Fever locker room. Her nose wasn't broken although it was swollen and she will have additional x-rays or scans to make sure there's no broken facial bones.
I asked her for her thoughts on the play and all should would say is, "They'll review it."
Tamika Catchings was a bit more diplomatic than her injured and angered teammate, "I think it's just one of those things that happens in the game. Definitely, I don't think either one was intentional."
But she did add this, "When she (Taurasi) goes up sometimes her elbows are out. She must have got up high because J-Dav (Davenport) is tall. Got her nose all the way up there."
These two teams play again on Friday in Indiana which leaves the possibility for carryover of feelings into that game.
Penny Taylor didn't think (or wouldn't admit) that there would be any, "I didn't see either of (the incidents) but you don't expect people to be intentionally smacking people in the face but it happens as we know. We've just got to try and avoid it as much as we can and I don't expect people to take it as intentional and carryover into other games. It was a tough game tonight. A lot of physical play. Those two (incidents) were just ones that happen to injure people."
Taylor, who had her own lip slip open by an elbow during last year's Finals series with the Fever, made another great point, "It's a physical game out there. I'm actually surprised more things like that don't happen."
Penny is correct. This is a physical sport and you've got bodies flying at each other and injuries like we saw tonight are possible. You only can hope that Zellous' elbow wasn't intentional as Taurasi's plainly was.
Up until the Bonner injury, this was a fantastic game played with playoff intensity and emotion. The Fever defense adjusted to the Mercury and were doing a fantastic job rotating on the pick and rolls. The Mercury weren't scoring on fast break points but they were wearing down the Fever and had a few fourth quarter tricks left up their sleeve.
It promised to be another fantastic finish, picking right up where the 2009 Finals series left off. Now we will wait and see if Bonner is able to play on Friday in Indiana and if the league has any punishment in store for Taurasi.
Game Photo Gallery. Photo's by Ryan Malone:
The two-game home-and-away series the Mercury have with the Indiana Fever this week (with Chicago thrown in the middle on Tuesday) will be the final big test before the playoffs.
The Merc have all but wrapped up the second seed in the West and the final home game of the season against the ridiculous 24-4 Seattle Storm on the 20th will likely not mean much in the standings and sets up to be a classic end-of-season, rest-your-starters game.
The Fever (17-10) have a slim grasp on first place in the East with Atlanta (18-11) nipping at their heels, so this will obviously be an important game for them as well.
Indiana still features all-world super player, Tamika Catchings (averaging 17 points and seven rebounds) and uber-tough girl Katie Douglas (14 points, 40 percent 3-pointers). Local ASU star Briann January is splitting time at the point with Tully Bevilaqua and giving the Fever a scoring punch and burst of speed off the bench.
With both Tammy Sutton-Brown and one of the great characters in all sports, Ebony Hoffman, starting in the front court, the Fever are big and yet they are only a middle of the road rebounding team with a -1.26 differential which puts them just ahead of the Mercury (-1.89).
But the bottom line comes down to the classic offense-versus-defense battle, just as it did in the five-game finals series last October. The Fever are holding teams to a league-best 72.89 points per game while the Mercury once again are setting a blistering pace at 97.19 per game.
Even that great season average is lower than the more recent performance. In totaling 103 points on Friday against the Silver Stars, the Mercury have surpassed their season scoring average in 11 of their last 12 games (101.8 points per game). It was also the Mercury's 10th 100-point game of the season, breaking their own WNBA record (2009) with their ninth back-to-back 100-point outing in franchise history.
So, this is a good test for Kara Braxton against some of the league's top post players and for the Mercury a tune-up and measuring stick for the playoffs. Indiana is disciplined, well-coached and clearly a fantastic defensive team.
I also hope to see continued improvement from Tangela Smith. Anyone who reads my Mercury coverage on a regular basis (and my poor wife who gets to listen to my rants) knows I am not a big fan of her play this year.
Despite a great shooting night on Friday (7-for-9), she continues to struggle with her shot, but that's irrelevant as long as her defensive activity level is high. It has been much better of late and she looks to be picking up steam headed into the playoffs.
It's hard to watch a player both missing shots on one end and giving a lethargic performance on the other. Fortunately, Smith seems to resolving at least one of those two issues.