Berliner Tageblatt - NBA fines Grizzlies' Morant for imaginary gun gesture

Advertisement Image
Berliner Tageblatt
Advertisement Image
Advertisement Image
Advertisement Image
Advertisement Image
Advertisement Image
Advertisement Image
NYSE - LSE
RBGPF -12.83% 60.27 $
RYCEF -3.84% 8.86 $
CMSD -2.48% 22.2 $
CMSC -2.03% 22.15 $
BCC -3.97% 94.68 $
VOD -1.54% 8.45 $
SCS -3.92% 10.21 $
NGG 0.58% 65.59 $
GSK -2.62% 33.6 $
RIO -1.35% 54.87 $
JRI -1.91% 11.765 $
RELX 0.98% 49.02 $
BCE -0.1% 20.98 $
AZN -2.91% 64.87 $
BTI 0.84% 40.55 $
BP -6.37% 26.23 $
NBA fines Grizzlies' Morant for imaginary gun gesture
NBA fines Grizzlies' Morant for imaginary gun gesture / Photo: © GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

NBA fines Grizzlies' Morant for imaginary gun gesture

The NBA took aim at Memphis Grizzlies star Ja Morant's imaginary gun gesture on Friday, fining him $75,000 after he used it to celebrate a basket for the second time in a week.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

NBA executive vice president Joe Dumars said in a statement that Morant -- who was suspended twice in 2023 for incidents with real firearms -- had been warned by the league after the first celebration "that this gesture could be interpreted in a negative light."

Dumars called the gesture "inappropriate".

Morant was first warned after he and Golden State's Buddy Hield made the gesture, mimicking aiming a gun, at each other during a Grizzlies-Warriors game on Tuesday.

Morant then made similar gestures in a game against the Miami Heat on Thursday, when the gesture was directed at other Grizzlies players.

Morant scored 30 points and drilled the game-winner in the Grizzlies' 110-108 victory at Miami.

Morant was suspended twice in 2023 for a total of 33 games after videos of him displaying firearms were live streamed on social media.

In March of 2023 he was banned eight games for live streaming a video in which he displayed a gun while at a Denver nightclub.

He was banned for 25 games to pen the 2023-24 season after another video of him displaying a gun inside a car surfaced, the league saying his decision to "once again wield a firearm on social media is alarming and disconcerting".

The National Basketball Players Association called the 25-game suspension "excessive".

H.Seidel--BTB

Advertisement Image