Wiz lose big without Arenas
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In the span of a few hours, the Washington Wizards lost their
leading scorer, their on-court leader and maybe their season.
Taking the court only hours after star guard Gilbert Arenas
was suspended indefinitely by pitiless NBA commissioner David
Stern, the Wizards were beaten 121-98 by the Cleveland Cavaliers on
Wednesday night, a possible preview of darker days ahead for
Washington.
"It's like a black cloud over us," guard DeShawn Stevenson
said. "Hit us over the head again and we might break."
LeBron James piled up 23 points, eight assists and seven
rebounds in just three quarters, and Shaquille O'Neal added 17
points in 17 minutes as the Cavaliers took no mercy on the Wizards
and posted a season-high for points to win for the 13th time in 15
games.
Washington ended a long, draining day with a lopsided loss.
The Wizards played for the first time this season without
Arenas. He was suspended by Stern, who in a scathing statement
called the gregarious guard's recent behavior "not currently fit to
take the court." Stern handed down his stiff sentence on Arenas
while the three-time All-Star is being investigated by federal and
local authorities after admittedly bringing unloaded guns to
Washington's locker room.
Antawn Jamison scored 26 points and Randy Foye 18 for the
Wizards. Earl Boykins started for Arenas, whose 22.6 points per
game, sweet stroke, leadership and jovial personality will be
missed.
Arenas' problems began after an alleged dispute over
card-playing gambling debts and a heated discussion in the locker
room with teammate Javaris Crittenton. The New York Post reported
that the two drew weapons on each other. Arenas said in a statement
that he took unloaded guns from his locker in a "misguided effort
to play a joke" on a teammate.
No one around the Wizards finds any of it funny now.
"This situation has put the whole organization in a bad
light," Jamison said. "It's an unfortunate situation, but we have
to find a way to play through it and put it behind us. It's sad,
but this is not what we are. It's a bad decision on two people and
we have to pay for it."
With every game he sits, Arenas, who was punished by Stern on
his 28th birthday, stands to lose about $147,200 of his $16.2
million this season. He's in the second year of a six-year, $111
million contract. And while the financial loss is substantial,
Arenas will also miss the game he so loves.
He may only have himself to blame.
Arenas was suspended without pay by Stern, whom the Wizards
guard had dubbed "mean" following Tuesday night's game in
Philadelphia. Stern probably didn't appreciate that remark or some
of Arenas' other antics, which included being photographed pointing
his index fingers, as if they were guns, at his teammates and his
overall nonchalance about the serious matter.
The Wizards arrived at Quicken Loans Arena already missing
Arenas, who had traveled with them to Cleveland before learning of
his suspension. The team got off its bus and promptly had to walk
through a metal detector, an ironic reminder of what led to their
teammate's' troubles.
The overriding thought was that Stern would wait for the
legal process to play out, but he chose to act swiftly, a move that
stunned some around the league.
"Surprised? No," James said. "Honestly, I'm not. People have
been asking me my opinion and what I thought would happen. I didn't
know it would be that extreme. I didn't know he would be suspended
indefinitely. It's definitely tough. I know Gil and he loves the
game of basketball, and that's for anybody, to have the game be
taken away from you like that, I know it's tough.
"But you've got to use better judgment sometimes."
O'Neal refused to comment on Arenas' plight. After being
asked, O'Neal simply traced his fingers along his lips as if
closing a zipper.
Arenas' suspension compounds Washington's problems in coach
Flip Saunders' first season with the team. Healthier than they have
been in a long time, the Wizards were expected to contend in the
Eastern Conference. However, with their 12th loss in 16 games, the
Wizards dropped to 11-22 and fell 12 games behind first-place
Orlando in the Southeast Division.
"We have to find a way to turn this around, so we really have
to put this behind us as quickly as possible," Jamison said. "It is
what it is right now and we just have to focus on basketball. It's
been awhile as far as us doing, but that should be our main and
most important objective right now."
Perhaps exhausted by the day's emotions and back-to-back
games, the Wizards came out flat and fell behind by 13 in the first
quarter before cutting it to six. Washington's offense was not in
sync and the Wizards only had 43 points at half.
The Cavs exploited a size mismatch in the second quarter by
pounding the ball inside to O'Neal, who scored 13 in the period to
give Cleveland a 22-point halftime lead.
The Wizards trimmed it 11 in the third quarter, but Anthony
Parker hit a pair of 3-pointers and James drained a deep one to
push the Cavs' lead to 97-78. Cleveland coach Mike Brown emptied
his bench in the fourth quarter, giving James and most of
Cleveland's other starters some rest.
NOTES: The Cavs tied a season-high with 11 3-pointers and
reached 100 points before the fourth, the first time they've done
that since 2002. ... James was named Eastern Conference player of
the month in December after averaging 28.6 points, 7.4 rebounds and
7.6 assists and leading the Cavs to a 14-3 record.
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