Draymond Green is at it again.

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PHOENIX -- Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green was ejected from Tuesday night's 119-116 loss to the Phoenix Suns after receiving a flagrant foul 2 for hitting Jusuf Nurkic in the head.
The ejection is his third of the season, and he now will have to await a league review for the possibility of another suspension.
Green was ejected with 8:23 left in the third quarter after he swung and hit Nurkic in the head while defending him. At first, while Green's back was turned to Nurkic, he repeatedly held Nurkic off him. Eventually, Green turned and hit Nurkic in the head with his hand. Officials deemed the foul a flagrant 2 after a video review.
"I am not one to apologize for things I mean to do, but I do apologize to Jusuf because I didn't intend to hit him," Green said after the game. "I sell calls with my arms ... so I was selling the call ... and I swung and unfortunately I hit him."
Green's three ejections are tied for his most in a season. His first came after he picked up two technical fouls against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Nov. 11. His second came against the Minnesota Timberwolves on Nov. 14 when he put Rudy Gobert in a headlock. The NBA suspended Green for five games after the latter incident, with the league citing Green's history as a repeat offender for the length of the suspension.
We need him. We need Draymond. He knows that," coach Steve Kerr said. "We've talked to him. He's got to find a way to keep his poise and be out there for his teammates."
Green acknowledged Kerr's message.
"Like I said, if I intended to do that, then I would feel awful about not being there," Green said. "But my intentions were just to sell the foul.
"You guys have known me long enough, if I intended to do something, I am not apologizing. But I did make contact with him, so I do apologize. ... It's a hard hit."
Nurkic said Green's actions "had nothing to do with basketball," and Suns coach Frank Vogel called it "a reckless, dangerous play."
"I'm sensitive to our guys getting hit on plays like that," Vogel said. "I didn't like it. The refs did what they had to do. The league will do what they have to do."
In addition to losing Green to the ejection, Klay Thompson and Andrew Wiggins were later benched, leaving Stephen Curry to try to win the game with the team's young players.
"It seems like every game our bench has to come in and rescue the game," Kerr said. "Our starting group hasn't been able to put it together. That's why we are treading water."
The Warriors have dug themselves into a 10-13 hole a quarter of the way through the season as the core group of players they depend on continues to struggle.
"We need everybody to play at a level that we expect. When it doesn't happen, we lose," Curry said. "It's pretty simple. That's the predicament we're in. We all have to play better together, individually we have to play better. Whatever you're asked to do -- whatever minutes, whatever rotation you're in, be prepared to adapt."
Wiggins scored just three points on 1-of-7 shooting in 17 minutes, while Thompson scored seven points on 2-of-10 shooting, including 1-of-8 from 3, in 27 minutes. With just over six minutes left in the game, Thompson stepped out of bounds on the sideline for another Warriors turnover.
As Thompson made his way around the bench during the subsequent timeout, when he was subbed out of the game, he was yelling and continuously pacing, throwing towels on the ground and needing Curry to talk him down.
Thompson said after the game that it was "strange" not to close but that he deserved to be benched.
"I played like crap," he said. "If you've ever played basketball before, you know what you are capable of. You always want to be out there competing. That's just facts ... but I deserved to be benched. I've been playing like crap. Twenty games in, I haven't found a rhythm."
Instead, Kerr opted to close with Curry, Chris Paul, Dario Saric, Jonathan Kuminga and Brandin Podziemski. At the start of the second half, Kerr started Kuminga and Podziemski over Wiggins and Kevon Looney. These were Kerr's first major adjustments since warning last week that changes could be on the way.
All but one of the Warriors' bench players scored in double figures and finished with a positive net efficiency rating. Meanwhile, among the starters, Curry (with 24 points) was the only one to score more than seven, and only Thompson had a positive net rating (plus-4).
"I've been really patient in trying to get everybody organized, into groups and give guys freedom and space, but tonight did not feel like the night to have a lot of patience," Kerr said. "We needed some urgency."
 

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I hope he gets at least 10
 

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Last season in the playoffs that POS tried to cave in Sabonis chest when he stomped on him. I'd ban him from the league.
 

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What do you think they'll actually give him though?

Not what he deserves, but what he'll actually get?
 

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No news
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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Warriors have to be growing tired of this act
 

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NBA suspends Warriors' Draymond Green indefinitely.​

LOS ANGELES -- Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green has been suspended indefinitely by the NBA for striking Phoenix Suns center Jusuf Nurkic in the face during Tuesday night's game, the league announced Wednesday.
According to the NBA's release, "This outcome takes into account Green's repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts."
Green will be required to meet "certain league and team conditions before he returns to play," the NBA said.
Green received a flagrant 2 foul for striking Nurkic and was ejected for the third time this season.
The discipline come just about one month after Green's last suspension, which was for five games after for putting Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert in a chokehold.
The league has made it clear that Green's history as a repeat offender continues to play a major role in the severity of the punishments it hands to Green.
After Green was ejected on Tuesday in Phoenix, he told reporters that he didn't mean to strike Nurkic in the head, but was just trying to sell a call. He agreed that the move warranted the Flagrant penalty 2 that he was assessed in the moment, but didn't seem as though it was a big enough deal.
Green echoed this same message to the league throughout the interview process on Wednesday. But it didn't matter. The Warriors have made it very clear to Green that they need him on the floor. That need is greater now than ever, as Golden State sits with a 10-13 record, two of their most important players in Klay Thompson and Andrew Wiggins continue to struggle, and they are suffering from the same exact issues that plagued them last season.
"We need him. We need Draymond. He knows that," coach Steve Kerr said. "We've talked to him. He's got to find a way to keep his poise and be out there for his teammates."
Green acknowledged Kerr's message, but in his response still didn't account for what he has to do to remain available.
"Like I said, if I intended to do that, then I would feel awful about not being there," Green said. "But my intentions were just to sell the foul."
A source told ESPN last month that the Warriors have lost their leverage with disciplining Green after failing to hold him accountable for punching former teammate Jordan Poole at last year's training camp.
When Green stomped on Sacramento's Domantas Sabonis during the first round of the playoffs, the Warriors defended and stood by him. They did the same after his incident with Gobert in November, though Kerr did say his actions were "inexcusable."
In Phoenix, as Green swung and hit Nurkic in the jaw right in front of the Warriors bench, no one had a strong reaction. Postgame, Kerr dismissed the question regarding the play, saying he hadn't seen it yet.
But now with Green out indefinitely, he will have missed the majority of the Warriors' games this season due to a suspension. Golden State is at an early crossroad in their season, and his absence and repeated behavior is making it that much harder for them to cross it successfully.
 

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Good job Mr. Silver
 

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