PHILADELPHIA
VS.
INDIANA


MILWAUKEE
VS.
ORLANDO


MIAMI
VS.
CHARLOTTE


NEW YORK
VS.
TORONTO


SAN ANTONIO
VS.
MINNESOTA


L.A. LAKERS
VS.
PORTLAND


SACRAMENTO
VS.
PHOENIX


UTAH
VS.
DALLAS





Wednesday, May 30

Lots of rough stuff in Jazz-Mavs grudge match

Special to ESPN,com

Suddenly, it can't happen. This spring, somehow, hoop lovers will have to survive without our annual New York-Miami playoff mugging.
Steve Nash
Mavs point guard Steve Nash has gotten bloody in this series.

Think you can make it?

Luckily, for the unsure, there is a consolation series. For one more game we've got an alternative to ease the transition. Smokers who try to quit throw on a patch. Knicks-Heat addicts might consider attaching themselves to Jazz vs. Mavericks.

Which qualifies as Son Of Knicks-Heat.

Skeptics should tune in Thursday to see the latest from this throwdown. This is the series that turned the next John Stockton into the new Steve Gash, replete with a seven-stitch zipper across his forehead. This is the series in which Karl Malone, to prepare for Game 4, bolted Dallas for his ranch in Arkansas to point his rifle at wild game. This is the series which inspired Shawn Bradley, at long last, to swing back.

This is the series where the fineable comments are uttered before the opening tip, as a warning, rather than the more traditional practice of responding to the roughhousing.

Russell
Russell

Bradley
Bradley

"Some flagrant foul, somewhere in that game, is going to happen," said Utah's Bryon Russell, submitting his Game 4 prediction.

"I'm sure," Russell continued. "That's how it's been the whole series."

That's how it's been for 18 months now between these teams, long before there was any hint of an Old Guard vs. New Kidz matchup materializing in the post-season. It started less than in a week into the Mark Cuban regime, and amazingly had nothing to do with Cuban, when Don Nelson stormed onto the Reunion Arena floor to go chest-to-chest and nose-to-nose with Malone. Tired of watching his players bullied by a Mailman, Nelson bolted his bench and threatened Malone with a "kick your ass" proclamation. Malone mercifully declined to slug a 60-year-old man, but that was only Act 1.
Some flagrant foul, somewhere in that game, is going to happen. I'm sure. That's how it's been the whole series.
Bryon Russell

We have since witnessed enough wacky episodes to make this series sitcom-worthy. Heading into Game 4, the teams had played 11 times since Dec. 8, 1999 -- including the first three games of their first-round encounter, which the Jazz used to build a 2-1 lead.

In those 11 games, Son Of Knicks-Heat has accounted for:

  • 36 technical fouls

  • 7 flagrant fouls

  • 8 ejections

  • And 2 suspensions, one each for Nelson and Malone.

    "It's always something between these two teams," Mail concurred.

    Especially in the playoffs, with something finally at stake. Save the sight of Nelson being dragged along the floor, clutching Malone's leg, it's tough to imagine stuff we haven't seen from these clubs.

    In Game 1, Nelson got tossed halfway through the fourth quarter -- with son Donnie and veteran forward Mark Bryant also collecting technicals. Nelson's subsequent rants about Utah's "flopping" and "manipulating the referees" led to an even more hostile environment in Game 2, with the added spectacle of the shy Dirk Nowitzki becoming public enemy No. 41 in Wasatch Country.

    Nowitzki
    Nowitzki

    Nowitzki, you see, unwisely uttered the closely held belief of every visiting player -- that "Utah is a bad city" -- and wound up being booed every time he touched the ball. Doesn't matter that Nowitzki might be the least likely villain on his team. Just like that, he joined the Salt Lake City Chamber of Commerce most-wanted list, alongside former teammate Dennis Rodman and a Big D legend, Derek Harper.

    At that point, it figured that Dallas would meekly depart like Miami, with its reputation as 53-win overachievers stained by all the whining. So, naturally, Game 3 was when Bradley unexpectedly summoned the gumption to do what Nelson was looking for back when all the nastiness started. He stood up to the Ultimate Mail, chopping at Malone with both elbows after being knocked around for the first half-quarter, and, even more amazingly, there would be Utah response. Malone obviously couldn't afford to get kicked out, but there was nothing holding back C-O-P and Greg Ostertag, the Jazz's two centers. Instead, Olden Polynice and Tag stuck around to total zero points and four rebounds against Bradley's 10 and 10. It might have been the best game Bradley ever played, and he didn't even block a shot.

    It didn't hurt, of course, that the Mavericks managed to ring up 30 free-throw attempts to Utah's 11, after all that complaining. Also didn't hurt that Nash-turned-Gash shrugged off the seven stitches he needed after running into Stockton's teeth to make the game-winning hoop. Stockton, the best player in this series, wriggled free for a go-ahead runner with 34 ticks left. Nash answered with a fall-away jump, then answered the big media questions.

    Officiating, Steve? "I thought it was great," he deadpanned. And the series itself, Mr. Gash, when Utah's lead was sliced to 2-1? ""We feel it's a different series now."

    Uh, no it's not. Or did you forget what Russell said? You know what's coming next. No one's forgetting the obvious experience vs. youth tussle, but the physical conflict is just as recurring a theme here. Who is going to be tagged next? Funny, but methinks the odds won't be too long on Big Shawn as a target.

    Just don't bother betting on punishments, because the league office has been unusually quiet lately. Cuban, for example, went unpunished after heckling Jazz employees at the scorer's table, slamming press row with both hands and blowing kisses at Sloan ... all on the same night. All from the same guy who got docked $100,000 for sitting quietly on the floor at the Target Center.

    Again, what next? Well, a win by the Mavericks on Tuesday stretched this to a Game 5 on Thursday. That said, even though the Knicks and Heat always take it the distance, it's probably safer to simply brace for the next burst of physicality.

    That's the Sloan approach.

    "I think it's kind of interesting," said Sloan, a longtime lover of the rough stuff himself. Lots of New Yorkers and South Floridians wouldn't argue.

    Marc Stein, who covers the NBA for The Dallas Morning News, is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.

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