arenas 事件,雙方從飛機上就開始爭吵(ESPN)
Sources: Dispute began over card game
A dispute that began on the team plane and resumed more than 24 hours later in the team's locker room between Washington Wizards guards Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton is at the center of an investigation by local and federal authorities into Arenas' recent admission of gun possession on Wizards property, according to sources close to the situation.
Arenas
Crittenton
Multiple sources told ESPN.com that an argument commenced during a card game on the team's overnight flight back to Washington from Phoenix on Dec. 19 and escalated into a heated exchange between Arenas and Crittenton. The Wizards had Dec. 20 off, but sources say the hostilities resumed Dec. 21 in the locker room on a practice day.
Sources say that Arenas, in response to what was said on the flight, placed three guns he owns on a chair near Crittenton's locker stall and invited him to pick one before practice on Dec. 21. Sources said that Crittenton subsequently let Arenas know that he had his own gun.
The New York Post, quoting league security sources, reported in Friday's editions that Arenas and Crittenton pulled guns on each other over a gambling debt during the pre-practice confrontation at the Verizon Center.
The Washington Post, in a story posted on its Web site Friday night, quoted Arenas as saying, "That's not the real story." The newspaper also reported that the argument between Arenas and Crittenton was over "who had the bigger gun" and that there was never any intent to physically harm Crittenton, according to "a person who has spoken with Arenas recently."
It is not known how many other Wizards players were in the locker room at the time of the clash. The Wizards and Arenas have maintained since Dec. 24, when the team publicly confirmed that Arenas had stored three guns in a locked box in his locker, that the firearms were unloaded.
In an interview with the New York Daily News, Nets guard Devin Harris, a sixth-year veteran and 2009 All-Star, estimated that 60 to 75 percent of NBA players owned guns.
"I mean, look at the situation," said Harris, who told the newspaper he did not own a gun. "A lot of guys have been robbed. A couple of guys, God rest their souls, have passed away. I guess they feel like they need some sort of protection, I don't know. I can't speak for everybody."
If either Arenas or Crittenton is found to have brandished a gun against his teammate, long-term suspensions and heavy fines from NBA commissioner David Stern would appear to be likely, given the ever-rising levels of Stern's distaste for any hint of violence in the league in the wake of the infamous Indiana-Detroit brawl in November 2004.
The league office, though, is expected to wait to see whether local or federal charges are filed in the case before determining the scale of potential punishments.
Arenas spoke briefly with reporters Friday afternoon following Washington's practice and also made numerous statements via his Twitter account disputing the New York Post's report, which alleges that Crittenton became angry at Arenas for refusing to make good on a gambling debt, prompting Arenas to pull a gun first and Crittenton to respond by grabbing his own gun.
The Washington Post reported Friday afternoon that Arenas is threatening to sue the New York Post. The Washington Post also spoke to Arenas' father, Gilbert Arenas Sr., who said: "From the respect of guns being pulled in the locker room and at each other... that's ludicrous. [Gilbert Jr.] bringing the guns to the locker room to keep away from his kids, that's true. [But] Gil did not pull a gun on anybody. That's about all that I can say."
Arenas eventually turned his three guns in to team security and later told reporters -- after a CBSSports.com report on Christmas Eve revealed that Arenas was being investigated for violating league rules on gun possession -- that he brought them to the workplace because he no longer wanted them in his house after the birth of his third child in early December.
District of Columbia police officials immediately began looking into the matter and announced in a statement Wednesday, without naming any names or providing further details, that they have begun assisting the U.S. Attorney's Office in a joint probe into "an allegation that weapons were located inside a locker room at the Verizon Center."
Through a series of tweets, Arenas appeared Friday to be trying to downplay the severity of the situation in his usual glib manner. But the potential range of punishments would figure to be severe given the stricter-than-usual gun laws in the District of Columbia and the NBA's rules forbidding gun possession on league property.
Although no action from the league office is expected until the legal process plays out, which is the NBA norm, Stern is bound to take an especially dim view of the whole episode in deference to late Wizards owner Abe Pollin, who changed the team's nickname from Bullets to Wizards in 1997 in part because he was so profoundly affected by the assassination of former Israeli prime minister and close friend Yitzhak Rabin. Until his death in November, Pollin was as close to Stern as any NBA owner.
"There is an active investigation by D.C. law enforcement authorities, which we are monitoring closely," NBA spokesman Tim Frank said Friday. "We are not taking any independent action at this time."
The Wizards, in a statement issued Friday, said: "We take this situation and the ongoing investigation very seriously. We are continuing to cooperate fully with the proper authorities and the NBA and will have no further comment at this time."
In Friday's New York Post report, Wizards president Ernie Grunfeld is quoted as saying: "It's in the hands of the authorities. We're going to get to the bottom of this, if there is a bottom to this."
The controversy is the latest and possibly biggest setback in Washington's highly disappointing 10-20 start. Arenas is averaging 22.7 points and 6.9 assists after missing much of the past two seasons because of multiple surgeries on his left knee, but there is already considerable curiosity -- not only in the media but among rival teams watching the drama unfold -- whether the Wizards will eventually try to void the remainder of Arenas' mammoth six-year, $111 million contract because of this serious
nature of this incident.
Arenas may not play Saturday against the San Antonio Spurs because of soreness in his left knee, Wizards head coach Flip Saunders told The Washington Post on Friday. Saunders would not comment on the reported dispute between Arenas and Crittenton.
Crittenton has not played all season because of an ankle injury and declined comment Friday when reached by the Washington Post. Crittenton's new agent, Mark Bartelstein, also declined comment Friday.
ESPN報道,奇才隊后衛阿里納斯(Gilbert Arenas)和科里坦頓(Javaris Crittenton)的爭吵最早出現在球隊12月19日從菲尼克斯返回華盛頓的飛機上。多個消息源告知ESPN,兩個人在一次紙牌游戲時出現了不和諧爭吵,然后事端逐步升級,盡管球隊12月20日放假一天給了雙方冷靜的24小時,但是在21日的訓練日,兩個人還是在更衣室重燃戰火。
消息源稱,阿里納斯為了回應雙方在爭吵中所說的話,將自己擁有的三支槍放在了靠近科里坦頓位置的椅子上,并邀請對方挑出一把(莫非是決斗?)。科里坦頓隨后讓阿里納斯知道,他自己也有槍。
而紐約郵報從聯盟安全部門的消息源得知,雙方是因為一次賭局才互相拔槍對峙。
華盛頓郵報則刊登了有關阿里納斯的澄清聲明,他表示目前的報道失實,報紙同時表示雙方爭論的焦點是誰的槍更大,并沒有對科里坦頓有任何身體上的傷害,而這個消息源是最近和阿里納斯交流過的人。
目前不知道奇才有多少名球員當時目睹了這個事情,而阿里納斯的三把槍已經在12月24日被收繳。
聯盟方面還在等待當地部門的調查,沒有做出任何相關人員的懲罰。
阿里安斯在當地時間本周五下午曾在訓練過后做了簡短的發言,并通過Twitter進行了很多聲明駁斥紐約郵報的報道。在紐約郵報的報道里,科里坦頓因為阿里納斯拒絕兌現賭局而生氣,這促使阿里納斯首先拔槍,然后科里坦頓做出回應拿出了自己的槍。
華盛頓郵報在周五下午寫道,阿里納斯決定起訴紐約郵報,而他的父親則聲稱兩個球員在更衣室拔槍相向是荒謬的,阿里納斯帶槍到更衣室是為了讓槍遠離自己的孩子,這是真的,而他并不會拔槍指向誰。
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