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Cleveland Cavaliers face possible discipline after altercations at end of Game 1 loss to Golden State Warriors

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The Cavaliers could be without two of their starters for Game 2 if the NBA decides to discipline Kevin Love and Tristan Thompson following an altercation in the final moments of Game 1.
OAKLAND, Calif. — The Cleveland Cavaliers could be without two of their starters for Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday.
Tristan Thompson might face a suspension after shoving the ball in the face of Draymond Green in the closing seconds of Game 1 on Thursday after he was already ejected.
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The closing moments of regulation in Game 1 had everything. We let the Cavs and Warriors tell the unbelievable story in their own words.
JR Smith claims he knew the score was tied in the waning seconds of regulation in Game 1, thinking the Cavaliers were going to call a timeout.
LeBron James and Tyronn Lue were left frustrated by the referees’ controversial decision to reverse a charge call in the final minute of regulation of the Cavaliers’ Game 1 loss to the Golden State Warriors.
Kevin Love, who was not in the game at the time, could be hit with a one-game suspension for stepping on the court while an altercation was ongoing. The Golden State Warriors were up by eight points with five seconds remaining in the contest, but there was 2.5 seconds left on the shot clock.
Warriors guard Shaun Livingston pulled up for a midrange jumper and Thompson contested the shot, but he also flung his elbow and made contact with the right side of Livingston’s chest. Official Tony Brothers immediately called a Flagrant 2, which warrants an automatic ejection.
“I contested a shot that shouldn’t have been taken,” Thompson said after the Warriors took Game 1 in overtime, winning 124-114 on Thursday. “I mean, it’s like the unspoken rule in the NBA: If you’re up 10 or 11 with about 20 seconds left, you don’t take that shot. I make the contest, and next thing I know I was being kicked out for making a contest that we learn in training camp. I don’t know why I got thrown out.”
Prior to Thompson exiting the court, Love was seen walking on the court as Brothers went to the scorer’s table to relay his ruling. Green began taunting Thompson by waving goodbye. When the two forwards approached each other, Thompson had some words before ramming the ball into Green’s face.
“I didn’t hear him,” Thompson said, “but I heard him and the rest is history.”
Love was quickly summoned off the court by an assistant coach. By rule, a player who is not in the game at the time of a skirmish is not permitted on the court. However, Love said he was not worried about receiving disciplinary action from the league for the sequence.
2018 NBA Finals
Complete coverage| Expert picks| Bracket
• Oral history: Game 1’s wild end of regulation
• Lowe: Which lineup gives Cavs best chance?
• So happy together: Warriors’ secret weapon
• How the Cavs can defy odds, pull off upset
• Playoff MVPs: LeBron, Draymond and more
• 5-on-5: Answering the big Finals questions
• NBA offseason guides for eliminated teams
• Tickets on Vivid Seats
Complete coverage| Expert picks| Bracket
• Oral history: Game 1’s wild end of regulation
• Lowe: Which lineup gives Cavs best chance?
• So happy together: Warriors’ secret weapon
• How the Cavs can defy odds, pull off upset
• Playoff MVPs: LeBron, Draymond and more
• 5-on-5: Answering the big Finals questions
• NBA offseason guides for eliminated teams
• Tickets on Vivid Seats
“No,” Love told ESPN. “I was already on the court trying to get the refs’ attention before the scuffle.”
Livingston and Klay Thompson promptly wrapped Green up from retaliating, possibly saving the forward from a suspension.
“I don’t care about that incident,” Green told ESPN. “It don’t matter. Life goes on.”
Warriors players say veteran big man Kendrick Perkins, who was inactive, was the most fired up Cavalier. According to ESPN’s Dave McMenamin, Green was mimicking a cheerleader waving pom-poms to mock Perkins who was screaming towards the Warriors’ side of the court.
Livingston defended his decision to shoot at that juncture of the game.
“I say that we don’t take the turnover. I don’t take the turnover,” he told ESPN. “Kevin [Durant] threw me the ball and he threw it to me like we were still playing. JR [Smith] was still guarding him, you know. No disrespect. We just play the game. So, that’s what it was… It’s the Finals. It’s all love… It was like a YMCA pickup games in the last 30 seconds.”
Green and Stephen Curry had his back.
“There was a differential from the shot-clock and game-clock,” Green said to ESPN. “You’re supposed to take a turnover? Some teams do. We’re not those teams. The majority of that time we’re in that situation, we shoot the ball. We’re not trying to go dunk on them. We shot the ball. It’s OK.”
“If there’s time on the clock and the shot clock differential, whatever, just play it to the end,” said Stephen Curry. “I don’t think we would get on our feelings if somebody came down and finished out a possession and got a shot up. I mean, obviously, if they’re doing some taunting or doing some crazy stuff, that’s a little different. But if you’re just playing the game of basketball and finishing out a possession instead of taking a turnover, I don’t see any problem with that at all. Guys are out there to finish a game and play the right way.

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