Toronto Star

NBA: World Peace says Stern found right balance after Malice in the Palace

- MARK MEDINA

LOS ANGELES— The moment highlighte­d the lowest point of his NBA career. Yet, Metta World Peace remains grateful for how the late NBA commission­er David Stern held him accountabl­e for his role in the Malice at the Palace.

“He handled it great. I just think he did the right thing,” World Peace said during the Los Angeles Lakers’ recent win over the New York Knicks. “He was about handling it the right way.”

Back when World Peace was known as Ron Artest, the former Indiana Pacers forward stormed into the Detroit crowd at The Palace of Auburn Hills and punched a fan for throwing a drink at him toward the end of a regular-season game on Nov. 19, 2004.

Stern handed Artest an 86game suspension. The punishment marked the longest nondrug-related suspension in NBA history and cost Artest about $5 million (U.S.) in salary.

Stern died at the age of 77 on New Year’s Day, nearly three weeks after suffering a brain hemorrhage that required emergency surgery. That has left the NBA world remorseful and appreciati­ve of Stern’s 30-year legacy as commission­er, where he expanded the league’s global popularity, increased its television revenue and promoted the game’s stars.

As World Peace knows, Stern also excelled at crisis management. And World Peace experience­d first-hand how Stern struck a balance between protecting and punishing the league’s players.

“He cared about the players,” World Peace said. “He told me one time, ‘I know you’re going through some stuff. But I have 360 other players to take care of. I can’t keep worrying about you. It’s not about you.’ I told him, ‘I get it.’ That’s why I listened when he spoke.”

He did not always have that perspectiv­e. During World Peace’s 17-year career, Stern suspended him 14 times for various incidents. He admittedly thought Stern sought to make an example out of him for his role in the Palace brawl.

World Peace soon realized that wasn’t the case. After he helped the Lakers win the championsh­ip in 2010, World Peace auctioned off his title ring and raised $651,006 for mentalheal­th charities. He testified before Congress on behalf of mental-health legislatio­n and also appeared in various public service announceme­nts on behalf of the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health. For those efforts, World Peace won the NBA’s J. Walter Kennedy Citizenshi­p Award for 2010-11.

Stern lauded World Peace for how well he rehabilita­ted his NBA image.

 ??  ?? Longtime NBA forward Metta World Peace was able to move on after his part in a 2004 brawl.
Longtime NBA forward Metta World Peace was able to move on after his part in a 2004 brawl.

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