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Basketball版 - ZZ CRAWFORD SAYS
相关主题
今天哨子会正常吗第七战裁判名单公布,两克劳福德齐上阵
口水大战(全文)草你妈joe crawford
史上最牛的31到40号今天看到有两个叫Crawford的裁判时就知道绿人没戏了
如花真是让人太感动了今天大雷克丝要赢!
转贴:Joey Crawford -----一个很吊~的主裁判昨天裁判不错
The Worst Foul Ever - Joey Crawford - Suns vs Blazers Playoffs 2010 [HD]这场球说明NBA裁判绝对有水平吹出“误判”很少的比赛
nba is a joke.九姨还会再主管一场决赛吗?
终于有整场的大屏幕看了今晚的裁判
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: he话题: crawford话题: nba话题: him话题: his
进入Basketball版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
z**********i
发帖数: 9546
1
http://thelab.bleacherreport.com/regrets-he-s-had-a-few-joey-cr
Very interesting and entertaining.
--------------------------------------------------------
Regrets, He's Had a Few: Joey Crawford Looks Back
by Howard Beck
May 18, 2016
When great players retire, we take a group dive into the nostalgia pool. We
relive favorite plays and rank their greatest shots, passes and dunks. It's
a little different when a legendary NBA referee steps away.
The best refs would rather not be noticed at all. Because being noticed
often means something has gone awry—a blown call, an argument, controversy.
The best refs would prefer to blend into the scenery.
And yes, that axiom applies equally to Joey Crawford, contrary to popular
perception.
“A lot of people think, ‘Crawford's the show,’” the recently retired ref
says, using a nasally tone to deride that common refrain. “That is far
from what I want to do out there.”
For nearly four decades, Crawford enforced order on NBA courts, combining
old-school authority with a flamboyant spirit. He stood out for his
excellence—no one has called more NBA playoff games —but also his
expressiveness.
Those arm-punch foul calls. The exuberant technicals. That bulldog scowl.
No one called a game with as much gusto as Crawford. No ref has been the
subject of more YouTube videos, both humorous and biting. Right, wrong or
otherwise, he was never going to blend in, as much as he might have wanted
to.
Crawford announced his retirement in March, after 39 seasons and 2,561
regular-season games—the second most of any referee in league history. He
will work some shifts at the NBA's replay center, but he has shelved the
whistle, along with the snug gray jerseys, the roll-aboard suitcase and the
stack of platinum mileage cards.
Crawford recently sat down with Bleacher Report to reflect on his
distinctive career. He delivered, naturally, with colorful candor. We talked
about those YouTube clips (he loves them), the players he liked, the
coaches he dreaded, the best fan taunts, the calls he wants back, travel
nightmares, celebrity sightings and what it's like to call a “T.”
Crawford became an NBA official in 1977, at age 26, after working in the
Continental Basketball Association. By his fifth year, he was working the
playoffs, and by his ninth year, the NBA Finals—the mark of an elite
official. He retired having officiated 374 playoff games, the most of any
referee in NBA history, and 50 Finals games, ranking him second. He
describes his rise as a mix of exhilaration and anxiety.
CRAWFORD: You're trying to make it, you're trying to get through, you really
don't know what's happening. The games are above you. Back then, it was a
two-man system, and the older guys were getting you through the games. You
didn't really know that they were getting you through the games.
And then you start to feel a little good about yourself. Some of the
veterans are saying, “You know, you're not really doing a bad job.” But
they would never out-and-out say you were a good ref. You were just looking
for [Darell] Garretson and [Earl] Strom and those guys to like you. You
wanted their approval. You didn't get it much, but that's what you wanted.
You didn't get TV games. But if you got a TV game, then you were doing OK. I
think my first one was Milwaukee-Boston, with Darell Garretson. And there
was an elbow foul—I'll never forget it for some reason. Harvey Catchings
comes to mind; I think it was him. That was like my coming-out party: You
got a TV game.
It was hard to get into the playoffs. When they called and told you you were
in the playoffs, you went, “Wow.” I worked with Hubert Evans, and he got
me through those two games. I was scared to death. But you hid it. You hid
it from everyone, including your partner.
Now it's your 39th year, and everything is like, I never relaxed. I couldn't
relax. I had to get better. And it really bothers me that I just couldn't
relax with my kids. It was just like basketball refereeing was like
resonating in your head all the time.
I remember Doug Collins making a statement about he's always felt guilty
about being out with his wife and his kids, and plays were going through his
head. And that's what happens when you ref, you know? It's weird.
In the last 25 years, there have been four Game 7s in the Finals—and
Crawford worked three of them. He has officiated some of the greatest
players to grace the court—from Dr. J to Magic and Bird, Jordan and Malone,
Shaq and Kobe, LeBron and Wade and Curry. He cherished the Game 7s—“the
pinnacle of what you do”—and listed his first playoff games as his most
memorable. But when pressed for favorite moments—A 60-point game? A Jordan
masterpiece?—Crawford demurs.
CRAWFORD: That's one of your regrets, is that you don't get to enjoy that
stuff. Because you're trying to get the plays right. I had the game with Ray
Allen, Game 6 [of the 2013 Finals], where they say that's the greatest. And
I think I have the game where Kenny Smith hits the seven threes [Game 1 of
the 1995 Finals]. And then I have the game where Reggie Miller scores the
points against the Knicks [eight points in nine seconds, in Game 1 of the
1995 Eastern Conference Semifinals]. And then Reggie, years later, he says,
“Did you think I committed an offensive foul on the push-off?” I said, “
If I did, I would have called it!”
That's the unfortunate thing about my job: When I look back on it and all
these games that I've done, I really don't know if I've actually enjoyed the
moment.
The three of you are leaving the arena going, “Damn, why did I do that?”
Or, “How could we have handled that better?”
Over the years, Crawford has matched wits with Pat Riley, Larry Brown, Jerry
Sloan, Lenny Wilkens, Phil Jackson, Gregg Popovich and Doc Rivers.
Notorious for his quick temper—and his propensity for doling out technical
fouls—Crawford nevertheless speaks fondly of the coaches he once tussled
with. And there was more to some of those ejections than the viewer could
know.
CRAWFORD: Johnny Bach was the coach at Golden State. He asked me one night,
he said, “Joe, throw me out.” His team wasn't doing good. I said, “John,
I'm going to have to put it on the report that you asked to be thrown out.”
He says, “I don't care, just throw me out.” I said, “You want to go on
one tech or two?” So I just hit him and threw him. And he goes, “All right
,” and he walked out. I guess he wanted to get his team going or whatever.
It was the only time that happened to me. John and I years later, as he was
an assistant for a lot of years, we used to laugh about it.
When I was earlier in my career, these guys didn't know who I was. Most
coaches, when they don't know you, they think you suck, you know? And in a
lot of cases, they were right back then—I did suck. A guy like Bill Fitch
was relentless. And no matter what I did, if I hit him with a T, the next
game he would come at me. And I had no idea how to deal with that. I really
didn't. I would ask the veterans, “What do I do?” They said, “Keep doing
it. It'll stop one of these days.”
“YOU WANT TO GO ON ONE TECH OR TWO?”-- JOEY CRAWFORD
I used to throw Dick Motta. He was just one of those guys who went after
young referees. And I was always told by the older guys, “Keep throwing him
, because then he'll stop.” I guess we just didn't mesh. But that wasn't
unusual.
Hubie Brown one night. We were in Cleveland. And I throw him on the way to
the locker room. He was annihilating me. I said, “Hubie, stay in the locker
room, you're done! You're done! Stay in there.” We had a guy who used to
take care of our locker room. And the poor guy, he knocks on the door. He
said, “Hubie's out here; he wants to fight you.” And I went, “I'm not
coming out!” Because he could have kicked my ass. Hubie and I laugh about
that to this day when we see one another.
About those technical fouls: Yes, Crawford has called a lot of them. How
many is unclear (the NBA says it does not keep such records). As personable
as Crawford is off the court, he was known for a short temper and a quick
trigger on the court. He called T's with a certain zest. But that doesn't
mean he enjoyed it.
CRAWFORD: It's not fun. You're really trying to avoid it. Sometimes you just
have to. And...there are some times you overreact. I am always very
impressed with the people who can get through the moment without a T or
raising their voice. Duke (Mike) Callahan probably does it better than
anybody, and nobody ever talks about Duke. Duke goes to the Finals every
year, and he just stays real calm, never bothers anyone. Just calls the
plays. And I admire that so much, that he can do that and not get crazy, or
get rattled. Maybe that's the word, rattled. And sometimes, I would get
rattled.
Duke and I are best friends, and we talk about it a lot. We've had some set-
tos. And Duke will say to me, “I am not Joey Crawford!” Because sometimes
you want the referee to be like you. And he's right. He's himself. And he
does it better than I do.
The two lowest moments in Crawford's career have been well-documented: the
night he ejected Tim Duncan for laughing, which resulted in a suspension
from NBA Commissioner David Stern; and a tax-evasion charge in the early
1990s. The Duncan incident pushed Crawford to seek anger-management
counseling that he says “changed my life.” The first warning signs came
much earlier in his career.
CRAWFORD: Al Attles, when he was coaching Golden State, may have been one of
the finest guys, very rarely got T's. I was on a streak where it was bad. I
was in my third year. I was really struggling. I call a couple plays, and I
'm not happy with the plays that I called. And now there's an out-of-bounds
play, and the ball just shot at Al. And he grabbed the ball, and he threw
the ball up. And I hit him with a T, and I threw him.
As I'm doing it, I'm saying to myself, “I don't know if I can do this.” I
was disgusted with myself. I went into the locker room after the game, and I
didn't even take my stuff off. I just put my hands on my head; I'll never
forget it. That room was cold. I knew right then that I had to do something
with my play-calling.
Referees exist to enforce rules. Conflict is unavoidable. It helps to have a
sense of humor.
CRAWFORD: Jamal Crawford comes out of Michigan [in 2000]. He didn't know who
I was. I mean, he was a kid, and he just got to the league. So I just kept
calling him “Cuz” [playing off their shared last name]. “Hey, Cuz.” And
he would look at me, out of the side of his face, like, “What the hell is
this guy talking about?” Now he calls me Cuz.
So the interactions with the guys, it's not all insanity. People always want
to know, “Who's the worst guy to deal with?” It's really not about that.
You're building these relationships. And guys will come after you.
Sam Cassell, I loved him. One of my all-time favorite guys. And he's pissed
off at me. And he's going back into the huddle. And I'm watching him. And he
's cursing me as he's going in for the timeout. I mean, he's annihilating me
. And I don't call a T. His back is to me. But I know he's annihilating me.
So I'm saying to myself at the time, “Joe, don't deal with it, just [let it
go].” I start walking toward the huddle, and [his teammate] is going, “
Joey's coming, Sam. Joey's coming.” And Sam's going like this: “F--k Joey
Crawford!” (Crawford is laughing as he repeats this.) I didn't laugh. It
would be unprofessional. And I didn't even hit him with a T, honest to God.
Those kinds of guys, I just got the biggest kick out of. Sam was one of
those kids who didn't care what he said. He thought he was right—he was
right.
John Salley might have been one of the best. He was at the All-Star Game. I
think he was a union rep. I have my three daughters with me. We're sitting
there with the kids—me and my wife and John—we were talking, laughing. He
was telling me the ugliest guys in the league, and he mentions Tyrone Hill.
We get back after the All-Star break. He's with Detroit, and I call a loose-
ball foul on him. So John says to me, “You call another one of those fouls
on me, I'm giving Tyrone Hill your daughter's phone numbers.” As I'm giving
the [call to the official scorekeeper], I'm laughing. I had tears coming to
my eyes.
PEOPLE ALWAYS WANT TO KNOW,“WHO'S THE WORST GUY TO DEAL WITH?” IT'S REALLY
NOT ABOUT THAT. YOU'RE BUILDING THESE RELATIONSHIPS. AND GUYS WILL COME
AFTER YOU. -- JOEY CRAWFORD
Verbal abuse from fans is a hazard of the job. Officials learn to develop a
thick skin. But they hear everything.
CRAWFORD: There was a guy in New York; he's no longer there. He used to sit
in the first row. As my hairline went, I'd get on the baseline, and he'd
just go: “Flesh-colored yarmulke, Joe?” (Crawford cackles.) It was just
getting bigger and bigger and bigger, my spot on my head, you know. Very
creative, very creative.
Most of the people you get to know around that circle there, in the first
few rows, they very rarely say anything to you. They become your friends. I
mean, I got spit on a few times and had beer thrown on me. But that's part
of what the profession is. It's not that big of a deal.
We were on a plane a few years ago. It was Duke Callahan, myself and Mark
Wunderlich, and we were flying back to Philly. It was during the Finals. And
my wife was with us. And I'm putting my [luggage] up, and here come some
guys. They were Lakers fans, and they had Lakers shirts on. I guess the
Lakers lost, because they were mad or something. I'm putting the bag up, and
the kid looks at me, and he goes, “Crawford, right?” I said, “Yeah.” He
goes, “You sucked last night.” And I went, “Oh yeah?” I said, “You
know, I get paid to take that crap on that floor, but I don't get paid right
here. So take your crap and just keep walking back there.”
You'll get the guy who, he's sitting there, and he's talking to his friend
on his cellphone. I'm at Starbucks, and he positions himself right next to
me. I don't know whether anybody's on the other line or not, but he said, “
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the assh--e's sitting right next to me.” (Crawford laughs
.) I'm getting a big kick out of it, you know? And I went, “Tell your buddy
that the assh--e's going down to the gate.”
But most of the people who are in airports and hotels are very respectful.
They may hate your guts, they may say all kinds of stuff—as soon as I get
off the plane in San Antonio, people are hollering at me, and I expect it—
but a lot of it's in really good fun.
They just want to talk about the game. That's the key. Where would we be
without these people? Where would we be?
Referees are not easily star-struck. NBA stars, after all, are some of the
biggest celebrities on the planet. But it's different when Jack Nicholson
says hello.
CRAWFORD: Jack Nicholson. He was my all-time favorite. I remember Easy Rider
; I think it was in '69. Now I get into the NBA, eight years later, and he's
sitting courtside [at the L.A. Forum], where he always sits. And I'm
looking at him, and I'm saying, “Eh, I'm not going to say anything.” Then
it's like three or four years I'm in the league. I take my warm-ups off, and
I put them down. I look at him, and I said, “Hey, Jack, how you doing?”
And he went, “Hey, Joe.” And I went to myself, “Jack Nicholson knows who
I am.” I got back to the hotel and called my wife. I didn't care if it was
2 in the morning. I called her, and I said, “Jack Nicholson knows who I am!
” She goes, “So what.” She hung up and went right back to sleep.
And there was Justin Timberlake. He's sitting courtside [in Memphis], and I
don't like to bother these people. They're bothered all the time. I'm
walking off the floor, and he's standing right there. And he says, “Hey,
Joe, how you doing?” I told my kids that, and they went, “No way.” I wish
I had my camera then. I would have been able to take a shot.
Today's NBA referees seem almost interchangeable—the league wants
uniformity. Crawford came up in an era when individuality was embraced, and
referees developed their own styles. Crawford was distinctive. That arm-
punch foul call that resembles a called strike? It came from all the time he
spent around his father, former major league umpire Shag Crawford. That
quirky gait—quick steps, arms up like a boxer? That came from former
referee Sid Borgia.
CRAWFORD: There was a lot of things where I was trying to emulate my father
without doing baseball. Yeah, the strike, calling the strike and calling
that offensive foul.
People say to me all the time that they know me because of my run. Sid
Borgia, who was a referee for a number of years in the ABA and the NBA. And
he would say to me, “Move like a boxer, move like a boxer.” Your arms up,
and move, move, move, move, move, move. So my run was almost like that boxer
thing.
I watched umpires growing up, and I watched their mannerisms. You could tell
a guy as soon as he walked on the field. I used to watch Mendy [Rudolph]
and all those [NBA referees] too, Eddie Rush and John Vanick and Joe Gushue,
who were working in the NBA then, and I would try to emulate them also.
Mendy used to get his two thumbs and put them on his forehead, and he'd
fling his sweat. I used to watch that all the time. I said, “Man, this guy'
s got style.” Fans were watching Wilt and Russell, and I was watching them.
Joey Crawford's style—lauded by some, loathed by others—has made him an
unlikely YouTube star. All of his quirkiest moments are there, along with
endless compilations of his (alleged) worst calls. He was even parodied by
Brandon Armstrong, whose hilarious, spot-on impressions of NBA players made
him an Internet legend. Crawford's daughters told him about that one. “It
was hysterical,” Crawford says of Armstrong's imitation. “I made a fool
out of myself numerous times. It's right out there.”
We asked Crawford for the backstory on some of his most infamous moments—
the Duhon dance, the sniper fall and the time he dragged Scottie Pippen off
the court—as well as perhaps his scariest moment, when he had to prop up a
concussed Big Baby Davis.
CRAWFORD: I got surprised by the play. I really did. I guessed on it, and I
guessed wrong. But I said, “Well, while I'm here calling this block, I
might as well just really do it.” So I just go ba-boom, ba-boom, ba-boom,
ba-boom, as I'm skipping out toward the free-throw line. And I got the play
wrong. And then the next day, Bob Delaney [an officiating supervisor] called
and said, “Joe, don't do that.” I said, “You're right, Bob.” I kicked
the hell out of the play and just overreacted and tried to sell it. It was
awful. Never should have did it.
CRAWFORD: I don't even remember the play. I think he fell, and I was trying
to get him out of the lane, so they wouldn't run him over. Scottie was down
there, and play was going on, and we're always taught: You don't stop play.
In college games, they stop it; I wish we could. So I must have just pulled
him out of the lane so he didn't get trampled.
CRAWFORD: My knee gave out. And I just fell. Honest to God, the knee gave,
and I go down. I'm laying on the floor, and it was hysterical when you look
back. I watched it. Steve Clifford's the coach of Charlotte, and he just
looks down at me like, “Get up, will you?” It was funny. But then somebody
on YouTube had it where it's the sniper, he's there and—boom!—he shoots,
and boom, down I go. It was pretty cool.
The actual cause was a knee injury that would eventually force Crawford into
retirement.
It was part of the problem. I fell five times last season, so I knew I was
at the end. As I was going, that thing would just give out.
CRAWFORD: Big Baby [Glen Davis] was with Boston, and I think they were in
Orlando. He was rebounding the ball, and the guy came down on the top of his
head and hit him. And he goes down. And I'm looking, and I'm going, “Oh,
this isn't good.” He got up, and he was trying to run down the court, and
he was bobbing and weaving. I just literally ran at him, because he was gone
. He was gone. He was going to hit his head, and I just kept running, and I
just tried to keep him up and just hit him, like I was trying to tackle him,
to keep him up. I mean, this guy's strong. And I'm screaming at Rasheed [
Wallace], “Rasheed! Help me! I can't keep him up!” So then he came over
and got him. Big Baby and I used to laugh about it. I would say, “I saved
your life.” It was very scary.
Like George Clooney in Up in the Air, referees spend much of their year on
the road, living out of suitcases and racking up rewards points.
Occasionally, there are surprising perks—like the time a USAir pilot, a
friend of Crawford's, invited him to ride in the cockpit on a flight from
Philadelphia to Cleveland. “That may have been the best single moment I had
in the profession, travel-wise.” And then there was the time he got stuck
in the Philippines in the middle of a failed government coup. Crawford had
traveled there to officiate an exhibition game featuring NBA players,
including Adrian Dantley, Tom Chambers and Mark Eaton. The game never
happened.
CRAWFORD: We land, 3 o'clock in the morning. [Referee] Bennett Salvatore is
on the tour with me. He calls my room. “Joe, turn the TV on.” I turn the
TV on; they had the machine guns. They took over the TV station. We were
scared to death. And then everybody got sick. The guys, all the players were
throwing up.
⚡Lightning Round⚡
Give me one word to describe…
Tim Duncan. Excuses.
David Stern. Friend.
Gregg Popovich. Different.
Rasheed Wallace. Smart.
Gary Payton. Loud.
Michael Jordan. Incredible.
Kobe Bryant. Tenacious.
Shaquille O'Neal. Strong.
Pat Riley. Warrior.
Mark Cuban. Smart-ter.
Doc Rivers. Engaging.
Phil Jackson Remembered.
The most polite player you ever dealt with? Bobby Jones.
Biggest complainers? Payton, [Allen] Iverson.
Former NBA city you miss the most? Seattle.
Current NBA city you'll miss in retirement? Milwaukee.
Favorite restaurant on the road? The Calderone Club in Milwaukee.
Best arena? Indianapolis.
Worst arena? Philly.
Arena you'll miss the most? Phoenix.
How many miles have you flown? Gotta be 6 million, 5 million. I think I've
got 4 million just on American.
Howard Beck covers the NBA for Bleacher Report and is a co-host of NBA
Sunday Tip, 11am-1pm ET, on SiriusXM Bleacher Report radio. Follow him on
Twitter, @HowardBeck.
z**********i
发帖数: 9546
2
克乔”愤怒自控的问题”存在了很长时间,并不特别针对任何人,联盟在之前和之后都
委以重任。
但是一出现邓肯那事,联盟就大张旗鼓澄清,这个可以侧面说明联盟对邓肯的爱护度可
能远超一般的看法。
在这样一个友好而无拘无束的采访环境下,克乔都没有直接提起邓肯那事的意愿,这本
身就说明问题。
如果克乔是想表达“歉意“,sorry和regret都非常自然,用excuses很有深意。

We
s

【在 z**********i 的大作中提到】
: http://thelab.bleacherreport.com/regrets-he-s-had-a-few-joey-cr
: Very interesting and entertaining.
: --------------------------------------------------------
: Regrets, He's Had a Few: Joey Crawford Looks Back
: by Howard Beck
: May 18, 2016
: When great players retire, we take a group dive into the nostalgia pool. We
: relive favorite plays and rank their greatest shots, passes and dunks. It's
: a little different when a legendary NBA referee steps away.
: The best refs would rather not be noticed at all. Because being noticed

1 (共1页)
进入Basketball版参与讨论
相关主题
今晚的裁判转贴:Joey Crawford -----一个很吊~的主裁判
预测下赛季土火排名The Worst Foul Ever - Joey Crawford - Suns vs Blazers Playoffs 2010 [HD]
记得九姨说过乔帮主从来不向裁判抱怨nba is a joke.
果然是Joe Crawford主裁game 4终于有整场的大屏幕看了
今天哨子会正常吗第七战裁判名单公布,两克劳福德齐上阵
口水大战(全文)草你妈joe crawford
史上最牛的31到40号今天看到有两个叫Crawford的裁判时就知道绿人没戏了
如花真是让人太感动了今天大雷克丝要赢!
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: he话题: crawford话题: nba话题: him话题: his