The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Nets fined $100K for resting players

- By Tim Reynolds

The NBA fined the Brooklyn Nets $100,000 on Thursday, marking the first time a team was sanctioned for violating the league’s player participat­ion policy that went into effect this season.

The Nets held out four rotation players — starters Spencer Dinwiddie, Nic Claxton and Cam Johnson, along with key reserve Dorian Finney-Smith — in what became a 144-122 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Dec. 27. Three of the players Brooklyn started that night logged 12 minutes or less.

Brooklyn asserted that giving players rest on the second night of a back-toback — at the start of a stretch where the Nets would play six times in nine days — was best for its club. But the league made clear to teams entering this season that resting multiple players, who are healthy enough to play, at once will no longer be overlooked.

“We’ve talked to all 30 teams about, ‘Hey, there is a way to rest your players,’ ” NBA executive vice president and head of basketball operations Joe Dumars said. “What we’ve said is sitting four or five guys at one time is not that way. So, if you want to get your players rest, there are ways to do this. But if you do it in a way where it becomes egregious in terms of sitting four or five guys at a time, that’s just not what we’re about in an 82-game league.”

The league’s investigat­ion included a review by an independen­t physician. The NBA said those resting players “could have played under the medical standard in the Player Participat­ion Policy, which was adopted prior to this season. The organizati­on’s conduct violated the Policy, which is intended to promote player participat­ion in the NBA’s 82-game season.”

After the game against the Bucks, Nets coach Jacque Vaughn insisted the team didn’t treat the game as if it was a meaningles­s preseason contest. It was the second night of a backto-back for Brooklyn and Vaughn said he didn’t want to put any player “in harm’s way.”

“I have too much respect for the dudes that suit up and put their body on the line and the competitio­n level to even mention the word exhibition,” Vaughn said that night.

The Nets went 0-4 on the four-game road trip that followed the game against the Bucks, losing each of those last three games by double figures. They are 210 in their last 12 contests to fall to 15-20 overall and ninth in the Eastern Conference. They resume play Friday at home against Oklahoma City.

The league’s board of governors approved the new policy — which the NBA says was put together out of “considerat­ion for the interests of fans, integrity of the game, player health, competitiv­e fairness among teams, and transparen­cy” — in September.

Teams can be fined $100,000 for the first violation, $250,000 for the second and then an additional $1 million gets tacked on for all subsequent violations.

Commission­er Adam Silver said before the season that the current participat­ion

policy boils down to a simple thought: If a player can play, the expectatio­n is they should play.

“This is not about, ‘You can’t rest your players,’ ” Dumars said. “It’s about how you do it, and that’s not the way to do it.”

 ?? Alex Brandon/Associated Press ?? Nets coach Jacque Vaughn directs the team during the second half against the Wizards on Dec. 29.
Alex Brandon/Associated Press Nets coach Jacque Vaughn directs the team during the second half against the Wizards on Dec. 29.

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