BOSTON (AP) —
Kyrie Irving says banning fans who mistreat NBA players won’t solve
the problem.
It goes much
deeper than that.
“(It’s) just
underlying racism, and treating people like they’re in a human
zoo,” Irving said after a water bottle was thrown at him following
Brooklyn’s 141-126 victory over the Celtics on Sunday night.
“Throwing
stuff at people, saying things. There’s a certain point where it
gets to be too much,” said the Nets guard, who spent two years
playing in Boston and revealed last week he was the victim of
racism during his time in the city. “You see people just feel very
entitled out here. ... As a Black man playing in the NBA, dealing
with a lot of this stuff, it’s fairly difficult. You never know
what’s going to happen.”
Irving had 39
points and 11 rebounds to quiet the first post-pandemic full house
at the TD Garden and lead the Nets to victory in Game 4 of their
first-round playoff series. The win gave Brooklyn a 3-1 lead and a
chance to clinch at home on Tuesday.
As Irving
walked off the court, he was nearly hit by a bottle thrown from the
stands. Irving and Nets guard Tyler Johnson turned toward the
stands and pointed. Police surrounded a man in a Kevin Garnett
jersey in the stands before leading him out in handcuffs.
A spokeswoman
for the TD Garden said Boston Police arrested one person Sunday
night “for throwing an object.”
“We have zero
tolerance for violations of our guest code of conduct,” spokeswoman
Tricia McCorkle said. “And the guest is subject to a lifetime ban
from TD Garden.”
The incident
mirrored bad behavior at other NBA games in the past week as arenas
began lifting capacity limits set during the pandemic.
In
Philadelphia, a fan threw popcorn at Wizards star Russell
Westbrook; in New York, one spit at Atlanta’s Trae Young as he
prepared to inbound the ball. They were banned, as were three fans
in Utah who Grizzlies guard Ja Morant said “just went too far” with
him or his family.
“Fans have
got to grow up at some point,” Nets forward Kevin Durant said. “I
know that being in the house for a year and a half with the
pandemic has got a lot of people on edge, has got a lot of people
stressed out. But when you come to these games you’ve got to
realize: These men are human. We’re not animals. We’re not in the
circus.
“You coming
to the game is not all about you as a fan. So have some respect for
the game. Have some respect for the human beings. And have some
respect for yourself. Your mother wouldn’t be proud of you throwing
water bottles at basketball players, or spitting on players or
tossing popcorn. So grow the (expletive) up and enjoy the game,”
Durant said. “It’s bigger than you.”
Durant scored
42 and James Harden added 23 points and a career postseason-high 18
assists to help Brooklyn move within one win of their first playoff
series victory since 2014. Jayson Tatum scored 40 points for the
Celtics, who were playing at home for the first time since
Massachusetts lifted its COVID-19 capacity restrictions.
One night
after the Boston Bruins beat the New York Islanders 5-2 in front of
the largest crowd to see an NHL game since before the pandemic, the
Celtics were hoping for a similar boost. And the sellout crowd of
17,226 came ready to let Irving know they hadn’t forgotten how he
professed his love for the city before opting out of his
contract.
They booed
every time he touched the ball, showering him and Durant with
obscene chants.
But that was
eclipsed by the postgame incident.
“We know how
these people here are in Boston. We know how passionate they are
about Kyrie in particular — they’re still upset at him,” Durant
said. “That’s no reason for them to act childish. Glad we got the
‘W.’ Hopefully, we don’t have to come back here this year.”
___
More AP
NBA