The Mercury News

Lzzo tells Green to stop crying to the officials

- By Mark Medina mmedina@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

DENVER >> The long conversati­on surely reflected Draymond Green expressing gratitude and reminiscin­g on pleasant memories. After all, the Warriors forward has considered Michigan State coach Tom Izzo “one of my best friends,” who has served as a “father figure, coach, friend and brother.”

The talk did not just center on nostalgia and platitudes, though. Neither man bites his tongue. So with Izzo in town for the Warriors’ 128-107 win over the Denver Nuggets on Saturday, Green’s former coach offered brutal honesty to a man who also often speaks his mind.

“What are you doing? You cry about every call,” Izzo said, according to Green. “You’re worried about the wrong things.”

Unlike what he often does with officials, Green nodded in agreement

“My relationsh­ip with him has meant a lot,” Green said of Izzo. “I can always get an unbiased opinion from somebody who really knows the game of basketball, which is special. He’s

somebody that will tell me, ‘You’re wrong.’ ”

Green often has believed he is right.

During his six-year NBA career, Green has shared his opinion with the officials. They do not always take kindly to Green’s feedback. Green has already picked up three technical fouls this season, including two in an ejection in last week’s win over Washington.

The NBA stated it ejected and subsequent­ly fined Green $25,000 for “failing to disengage” from Washington guard Bradley Beal after the two tangled for a rebound, a sequence that entailed Beal wrapping Green up and hitting his face. Green stated the NBA ejected him and later fined him because of his reputation within the league office that he constantly complains after he hears a whistle against him.

Green has since said, “I try to stop paying attention to the calls.” Green shared that Izzo stressed the need to back up those words with more consistent action.

“You can’t control what’s called,” Green said Izzo told him. “But you can control your reaction.”

Nonetheles­s, Green has often argued he needs to react that way, both to defend himself and to play with the necessary edge that has made him a twotime NBA champion, a twotime NBA All-Star and last season’s NBA’s Defensive Player of the Year.

“He’s kind of crazy. His competitiv­e desire, he’s nuts. I mean that in the highest sense of being compliment­ary,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said.

“A lot of these guys today grew up playing AAU ball together and it’s buddybuddy. Draymond wants to kill everybody out there, metaphoric­ally speaking. That competitiv­e edge, combined with his modern day versatilit­y, is an unbelievab­le combinatio­n for us.”

And it is an unbelievab­le combinatio­n that prompted Nuggets coach Mike Malone to call Green “the most important piece” on the Warriors.

Malone described Green as “the glue to that team” because of “intangible­s” that include his playmaking, rebounding, defense, leadership and toughness.

Because of that defensive versatilit­y, Kerr considered Green “the best defender in the league” and labeled him as “the ideal modernday power forward.”

Ideally, Green hopes to play better on defense this season after only considerin­g his play “solid.”

In recent games, the Warriors and Green both echoed his need to play more aggressive­ly, which resulted in averaging 15.67 points per game on 75 percent shooting, seven rebounds and 6.67 assists during the Warriors’ 3-0 trip against the Clippers, Spurs and Nuggets.

The next step? Green wants to answer Izzo’s call to worry less about the officials and more about his game. Green was touched that Izzo skipped what he called “a huge recruiting weekend” when No. 24 Michigan State hosted No. 7 Penn State.

Instead, Izzo said, “I’m going to see my guys” in Green and Nuggets former MSU star Gary Harris. Therefore, Green suggested he had a stronger obligation to follow up on Izzo’s biting words.

“He’s a special guy. I thank for him in my life,” Green said. “He has done so much for me, as a man, as a player. He’s meant a lot to me and still does.”

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 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Draymond Green’s college coach, Tom Izzo, has urged the Warriors forward to dial down his long-running war with officials.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Draymond Green’s college coach, Tom Izzo, has urged the Warriors forward to dial down his long-running war with officials.

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