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NBA investigating Kings for bizarre play vs. Warriors in wake of Draymond Green complaints
Sacramento Kings head coach Doug Christie. Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

NBA investigating Kings for bizarre play vs. Warriors in wake of Draymond Green complaints

The NBA has only disciplined two teams for trying to lose this season. Now they're investigating the Sacramento Kings for a simple reason: The league got embarrassed.

Kings head coach Doug Christie had his team intentionally foul Seth Curry late in the team's 110-105 loss to the Golden State Warriors despite the team being in the bonus. The move might have escaped notice if it weren't for a postgame interview by Draymond Green.

Commissioner Adam Silver worries about optics

The controversial play in question came with 3:15 remaining with the Kings leading by a point. Doug McDermott fouled the younger Curry brother before he reached the halfcourt line, giving the Warriors guard two free throws.

Christie apparently believed the team had a foul to give and wanted to use his fifth timeout before he lost it — teams can only use two timeouts in the final three minutes, and the Kings couldn't call timeout when the Warriors had the ball. It was bad strategy, but it's hard to call it nefarious, as many observers did on social media afterward.

Not for Warriors forward Green, however. After the game, when a reporter asked him about the NBA's epidemic of tanking, Green explained it was clearly out of control, as the Warriors had clinched a play-in spot despite their recent 5-12 stretch. He then singled out Christie's timeout call as an example of teams trying to lose.

That's the biggest reason that commissioner Adam Silver and then NBA are investigating: Embarrassment. The NBA fined the Utah Jazz for resting starters in every fourth quarter and the Indiana Pacers for sitting healthy players, but only after public outcry from people like ESPN's Stephen A. Smith.

Teams are making far more extreme decisions than the Kings in order to facilitate losing, but they don't have a prominent player speaking out about them and going viral.

Doug Christie and the Kings aren't really tanking

While Christie was lambasted for McDermott's intentional foul, he followed it up by drawing up a play for a McDermott three-pointer when the Kings got the ball back. His only controversial move was sitting rookie center Maxime Raynaud, but against a guard-heavy Warriors lineup, that's defensible. The NBA will still look into the situation, according to ESPN's Shams Charania.

The Kings' loss dropped them to 7-9 in their last 16 games, hardly the mark of a team losing on purpose. With Domantas Sabonis and Zach LaVine out for the season and Keegan Murray injured, the Kings have limited talent. While DeMar DeRozan missed Tuesday's game, he's played in 77 of the Kings' 80 games this year.

Teams have done far more egregious things than Christie has this season, especially when the Kings head man is coaching for his job. Ultimately, the mistake cost the Kings one single point — hardly a devastating error.

Does the foul cast doubt on Christie's coaching competence? Perhaps. Does it mean he and his team are nefariously tanking? Not at all. No matter what Green thinks.

Sean Keane

Sean Keane is a sportswriter and a comedian based in Oakland, California, with experience covering the NBA, MLB, NFL and Ice Cube’s three-on-three basketball league, The Big 3. He’s written for Comedy Central’s “Another Period,” ESPN the Magazine, and Audible. com

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