Spurs’ Kawhi Leonard ruled out for Game 2 vs. Warriors

Spurs’ Kawhi Leonard ruled out for Game 2 vs. Warriors
San Antonio Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard reacts after an injury during the third quarter in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals of the 2017 NBA Playoffs against the Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena on Sunday. (USA TODAY Sports)
Updated 16 May 2017
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Spurs’ Kawhi Leonard ruled out for Game 2 vs. Warriors

Spurs’ Kawhi Leonard ruled out for Game 2 vs. Warriors

SAN FRANCISCO: Spurs coach Gregg Popovich has ruled Kawhi Leonard out for Game 2 of the Western Conference finals with a sprained left ankle caused by what Popovich described as a “dangerous” and “unsportsmanlike” closeout by Golden State’s Zaza Pachulia.
Leonard had an MRI on Monday and Popovich had no timetable on when he’d be able to return to action.
“We’ll see what the MRI says, but obviously he won’t play tomorrow,” Popovich said.
Leonard left Game 1 on Sunday after re-injuring his tender left ankle in the third quarter when Pachulia’s foot slid under Leonard’s following a jumper by the All-Star forward.
The play happened in front of the Spurs bench and Popovich was angry at the time and even more upset a day after San Antonio’s 113-111 loss to the Warriors.
“A two-step, lead-with-your-foot closeout is not appropriate,” he said. “It’s dangerous, it’s unsportsmanlike. It’s just not what anybody does to anybody else. And this particular individual has a history with that kind of action.”
Pachulia said he simply challenged the shot like he was taught and felt bad that the play ended with Leonard getting hurt.
“This is the game of basketball, a lot of crazy stuff happens on the court, unfortunately,” he said. “It happened to me as well. When you play this kind of physical game, intense game, things happen. My approach to this game for the 14 years I’ve been in this league is to play hard and give 100 percent of whatever I have. I don’t agree with the calls that I’m a dirty player. I’m not a dirty player. I just love this game and I’m playing hard. That’s how I was taught since Day 1, honestly.”
But Popovich was not buying any defense from Pachulia about lack of intent.
“Because he has this history, it can’t just be, ‘Oh, it’s inadvertent. He didn’t have intent,’” he said. “Who gives a damn about what his intent was. You ever hear of manslaughter? You still go to jail, I think, when you’re texting and you end up killing somebody but you might not have intended to do that. All I care about is what I saw. All I care about is what happened and the history there exacerbates the whole situation and makes me very, very angry.”
Warriors acting coach Mike Brown, a former assistant to Popovich, said that he believes his old mentor was just protecting his players and pointed to a play that came shortly after where San Antonio’s LaMarcus Aldridge’s foot got underneath Stephen Curry on a jumper but there was no call because Curry did not land on it.
“It’s the same play,” Brown said. “Zaza’s not a dirty player. LaMarcus is not a dirty player. It’s a tough basketball play. You hate to see anybody get injured on a situation like that. You go back and watch the film, they’re both identical: two guys shooting the ball, two big guys going out to contest, they slide under the shooter a little bit — neither one I think on purpose — and one happens to land on one’s foot and the other one doesn’t.”
Leonard didn’t return, giving Golden State an opening for an 18-0 run that keyed the comeback win. The Spurs were outscored 58-33 after Leonard left the game as they could not survive without their best offensive and defensive player.