Draymond Green-Jordan Poole altercation: What to know after Green speaks for first time since incident


Whether verbal or physical, altercations between teammates come with the territory of sports at any level, from pee-wee to professional. However, there’s a level of respect that needs to be maintained, and the line is different for every team. It’s clear that Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green crossed that line when he got into a physical altercation with teammate Jordan Poole during practice on Wednesday, which he and the team have since confirmed.

Known for his fiery, passionate disposition, the 32-year-old Green has gotten into several mid-game verbal spats with teammates that have been caught on camera during his tenure with the Warriors, not to mention his reputation at practices. But he crossed the line on Wednesday when things got physical, and he’s facing the consequences.

Stephen Curry, head coach Steve Kerr and general manager Bob Myers spoke about the incident on Thursday, and Green addressed the media on Saturday. Here is a rundown of everything they’ve said about the altercation.

Green taking leave of absence

No official punishment for Green has been announced, but he said he will step away from the team for an indefinite period of time.

“I’m going to take a few days, or, I don’t know how many days,” Green said. “But just take some time to myself, allow our team to start their healing process, but take some time to myself, get deep in my thoughts and do things that I have to do to continue to work on me.

“I’m going to continue to stay away, as I’ve been away. And, you know, continue to do work on myself, as I always like to do. But also just to give guys space. It’s a big deal. It’s not like you just kind of keep on pushing. The reality is there is no right or wrong time. … But in saying that, I do want to give my team their space, I want to give Jordan some space. But also just take a few days, or whatever that is, and just continue to work on myself and think about the things I need to think about, and really just take some time to let everything breathe.”

Video of incident leaked

An initial report of the altercation said that Green “forcefully struck” Poole during a heated argument. On Friday morning, video of the incident was leaked by TMZ, showing that Green threw a full-fledged punch, which appeared to strike Poole in the face and knock him to the floor. Green approached Poole from the sideline of the practice court, bumping him with his chest, and Poole responded by shoving Green, just prior to Green throwing the punch.

The Warriors are exploring “every legal course of action” to figure out how the video was leaked, according to ESPN.

“What did I think of the fact of the video leaking? If I’m being 100 percent honest, I thought it was bullsh—,” Green said. “No other video leaks from practice. When we’re working on our sets, they don’t leak. When I’m coaching everyone up, that doesn’t leak. I thought it was bullsh— that the video leaked.

“I don’t know who released the video. I am very thankful to the Warriors organization for taking it as serious as they have and launching the investigation that they have, because, quite frankly, they don’t have to. They’re not obligated to launch an investigation for something that I did wrong.”

Poole did not suffer major injury

Poole reportedly participated in shooting drills after the incident on Wednesday, and he practiced fully on Thursday. It appears he was not seriously injured by the punch, and will likely not miss any time.

Green has apologized

Myers said that Green apologized to the team on Thursday for his behavior.

“It’s the NBA. It’s professional sports. These things happen. Nobody likes it. We don’t condone it, but it happened,” Myers said. “Draymond apologized to the team this morning. Jordan was there in the room. I was there in the room. The team, the coaches, the players, and we heard that.”  

Green also apologized publicly on Saturday during his press conference.

“I was wrong for my actions that took place on Wednesday. And for that I have apologized to my team. I have apologized to Jordan. … His family saw that video. His mother, his father saw that video. … And so for that I apologize to his mother and his father, and his family and his friends that care for him, because that is a sense or level of embarrassment that they have to deal with too.

“I apologize to this organization. We just won a championship — in nine days, 10 days there will be a ring ceremony. My family will be here, [Poole’s] family will be here. I’m sure they’ll be here. Quite frankly, that’s an elephant in the room. … On a night where it should be celebration and love, and it still will be, but there is, like, this dark cloud in the room, and I caused that. So I apologize to his family, and just what they’ve had to deal with over the course of the last 24 to 48 hours, and I will do what I have to do to make that right.

“I apologized to my family as well, for what they had to go through.”

Green was in bad space mentally

During his press conference on Saturday, Green said that he was in a “very, very bad space mentally” when the incident with Poole took place.

“I am a very flawed human being, and I think I personally know those flaws better than anyone,” Green said. “The work that I’ve done to correct those flaws, I think, has been tremendous, and yet there’s still a very long way to go. I think that’s a constant work in process. I am a constant work in process, and I’ll continue to do that work.

“The day [the altercation] took place, I was in a very, very bad space mentally, dealing with some things in my personal life that I — I can’t sit here and say, like, oh, you’re dealing with some things in your personal life, that that didn’t shorten your temper, that that didn’t change your reaction in moments. All those things are tied together, and I think that’s where you get to see the human being side of us, where if you are dealing with something, when you step on the court, it just doesn’t go away. That’s the same brain, that’s the same body that is dealing with something that’s now stepping onto that court.

“As a leader of this team, I needed to have a better feel for myself, and just know and understand where my wits end was, and what could possibly push me the wrong way. Quite frankly, I didn’t handle that well, and I failed as a leader. I failed as a man and I failed as a leader. And in turn, it’s led to this.”

Warriors refute report about Poole’s attitude

After news of the altercation between Green and Poole broke on Wednesday, a tweet from Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports suggested that the incident could have stemmed from a change in Poole’s attitude as he negotiates a potential extension with the Warriors. Kerr, Myers and Curry categorically denied the report, saying that Poole has been great during camp so far. Green followed up by saying that the incident with Poole had nothing to do with their respective financial situations.

“The specific tweet put out yesterday about insinuating that JP’s attitude or something has changed since he’s been in this training camp or even whatever time they’re talking about. It’s absolute B.S.,” Curry said. “Andre [Iguodala] addressed it yesterday with his tweet, and we can kind of leave it at that. JP’s been great.”

“Jordan has been fantastic throughout camp,” Kerr said. “There was a report that I was made aware of last night that someone put out there that Jordan had an attitude at camp — nothing could be further from the truth. He’s been fantastic. So, disappointing to see misinformation out there, but I wanted to make sure I set the record straight on that.”  

“Some of it, I would say from my vantage point, I don’t feel — and more importantly you should ask the players that you talk to —  I don’t think this was related to who’s getting paid and who isn’t,” Myers said. “I don’t sense that. Make your own conclusions. It’s probably more important what players think on that than what I think, but I don’t see it.”  

“As far as, I’ve heard reports that, oh it’s over a contract, or him getting an extension or me getting an extension,” Green said. “I can assure you, I don’t count other people’s pockets, number one. And so that’s not something I would ever start doing. And the way I was raised, that is simply hating on another man’s situation, and that’s something that you just don’t do. The one thing that I can assure you is that that had absolutely nothing to do with anything.”

Myers expressed disappointment to Green

Following the incident, Myers said that he spoke with Green and expressed his disappointment, but he was optimistic that Green and the team will be able to get past it.

“Draymond is one of my favorite players,” Myers said. “I told him that, but I just said, ‘You’re better than this. Don’t do this. Don’t do this to yourself. Don’t put yourself in this position.’ Still love the person. Don’t love what he did, but still love the guy.

“He’s complicated, but he’s a good person. He is a good person. He is. I’ve seen it. I’ve seen a lot of things he’s done. Yesterday wasn’t one of them. In this job that I’m in, these are men. He knows what he needs to do. He’s got to make amends, and he started with that this morning. I’m confident he’ll do that.”

Warriors looking to move forward

Curry and Myers both said they feel the team will be able to move past the incident with relative ease. They’ve dealt with other situations in the past, most notably the on-court blow-up between Green and Kevin Durant in 2018 that resulted in Green’s suspension, and Myers feels that makes them more equipped to deal with the current situation.

“It’s one of the best vibes that we’ve had in my 12 years here, as far as camp and health and mental health and camaraderie,” Myers said. “But, it’s unfortunate, and I’m not gonna deny it. It will take some time to move through it, but we’ll move through it and move forward. And I’m confident that we will. We’ve got a good team, we’ve got good leadership. We’ve got some guys that have been here a long time. And this isn’t our first thing that’s happened, our first sense of adversity. We’ve been through some of this before. Don’t like going through it, but it’s part of the NBA and it’s part of sports and it’s kind of what it is.”

“The vibe today at practice was great,” Curry said on Thursday. “Trying to take advantage of this week and make it about basketball, our preparation for the season. It’s obviously an unfortunate situation that — you know, getting asked about it — a situation that could have been avoided, but there’s a lot of trust in the fabric of our team, who we are, who we know those two guys to be, and how we’ll get through it and try to continue to make it about playing great basketball. The personal dynamics and stuff will work themselves out, and that’s part, again, of the culture that we’ve built here. I like how we responded today. Had a great practice, good energy. Try to keep that as the focus as we move forward.”

“Most importantly, my brothers on this team, who I’ve apologized to already, but, for me, that is the task at hand — to rebuild trust in our locker room, to pull everything back together as it needs to be pulled together in order to compete and defend a championship,” Green said on Saturday. “And although that is the least of my worries right now, it has to stay at the forefront, most importantly. Because everybody put the work in to compete for a common goal, and I can’t allow myself to be the reason that that doesn’t happen.”

Give the Warriors credit for addressing the issue head-on. They could have easily refused to discuss the situation, but they provided some clarity and insight into the team’s headspace following the incident. For now, it seems everyone is ready to move on, but we will have to monitor the situation as the Warriors prepare to begin their title defense, starting with NBA opening night on Oct. 18 against the Los Angeles Lakers.





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