Sun.Star Davao

I just hope he will learn the ropes quick, not only in dealing with impending fame but, more importantl­y, with the jarring physicalit­y in almost every NBA game.

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Look at Ingram. He is only 21 if I’m not mistaken. Already, he’s got a hot head.

I just hope he will learn the ropes quick, not only in dealing with impending fame but, more importantl­y, with the jarring physicalit­y in almost every NBA game.

The Lakers lost for the second time after bowing to Portland, but their biggest catch for the season, LeBron James, showed a class act in pacificati­on during the fight-marred match.

He didn’t throw a punch amid the banging of bodies and trading of punches.

Instead, he threw his arms around Chris Paul, immobilizi­ng the maddened Rocket guard before literally carrying out of the fray—out of harm’s way. And Paul isn’t James’s teammate.

Did I hear lusty cheers from the 19,000 spectators that packed the Staples Center heaped on James?

That should easily merit James a sportsmans­hip trophy, if not a Nobel Peace prize.

While “basket brawls” in any loop are almost unstoppabl­e due to the physical nature of the game, fist fights or a mere slight nudge that might hurt a player should still be a no-no all the time.

Even as Robert Jaworski has famously said that if you don’t want to get hurt, “Play chess instead of basketball,” still that shouldn’t give a player the license to inflict any form of hurtful act during a game.

Said Ramon Uy: “Basketball is a job. You can lose it with one flash of madness.”

Playing tough is fine, hurting is another.

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