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Warriors' Green annoys with “agenda”: “I'm not an angry black man”

Minneapolis – After a defeat in game 2, in which he received his fifth technical foul over the playoffs, the star Draymond Green Golden State Warriors, Draymond Green, pressed what he referred to as “agenda” to present him as a “angry black man”.

Green was fouled by Minnesotas Naz Reid when he held the ball with 8:46 in the second quarter of the 99:80 victory by Timberwolves on Wednesday evening in the Target Center. After Green was fouled, he pressed his left arm on Reid's head and Reid fell to the ground. Reid was called for the personal foul, but Green became a technical foul camouflage balage after the review. It is two technical data that receives shortly before an automatic one-game suspension.

After the game, Green reporters made a quick statement and said he thinks there is an “agenda” against him. He didn't work out.

“Looked like the angry black man,” Green said to reporters in the changing room of the visitors. “I'm not an angry black man. I am a very successful, educated black man with a great family, and I'm great in basketball and great in what I do.

“The agenda to try to make me look like an angry black man is crazy. I'm full. It's ridiculous.”

The striker of Warriors, Jimmy Butler, said he agreed that Green's call often leads to calling him, but he was not worried that Green later receives a suspension in the late season.

“No, I think he knows,” said Butler. “We all know. I thought he was fouled and maybe tried to sell the call. Someone was hit, but it is crazy. Every time he does something, it is always a review and is always something of this nature.”

With Stephen Curry through at least game 4 because of a tense left armpit, Butler said that the warriors need green to run and stay ready.

“He knows how much we need it more than ever,” said Butler. “So I don't think he's coming to seven [technical fouls]. “

After Green rated his latest technical foul after the evaluation, Green got up from the bank and cried out the officials. Curry went half a dish to calm Green.

Warrior's coach Steve Kerr then opted for Sub Butler for Green, and Butler went away Green to keep him from keeping it with the referees.

“I could see that he was pretty annoyed,” said Kerr, “and I just didn't want him to get another technical technical, so I took him out at this time and I know that he has to be careful now because he was two technicians gone.

“He has to remain composed. Obviously we need him and I am confident that he will do it because he knows the circumstances.”

In game 6 of the first round against the Houston Rockets, Green committed an open foul 1, just over three minutes after a defeat of 115-107. Green said that he was “laying” with his lack of serenity in this loss and said that he looked at a bad tone for his team that evening in the Chase Center.

Green said that in the 48 hours between the games 6 and 7, he recently led to heart-to-heart talks with beloved people like his wife Hazel Renee. His state coach of Michigan, Tom Izzo; And friends like the former teammate of Spartans Travis Walton.

Green also said that he had meditated and went to the spa. I rely on methods that he calmed down with NBA executives after hours of therapy, consulting and check-in zooman calls after moving Rudy Gobert in a Choken hold one before a season after a season after a season.

Green also heard slow jams to calm down and clarify his mind. In a team that organized Green, Curry and Butler in the suburb of Houston in the suburban hotel in the suburban hotel of the team last Saturday, Green swore his teammates that he would maintain his serenity and balance and lead the right way in game 7.

Kerr also had a long conversation with Green at The Morning Shootaround before game 7.

Green gave the tone for the Warriors in this 103-89 victory with his defense and all-round game. He had 16 points, six rebounds, five assists and two blocks.

He also held his serenity when he got a technical foul at the end of the second quarter after Fred Vanvleet fouled him, but Green pressed his arm out on Houston's Point Guard. After reviews and co -trainers and teammates, officials gave a technician to calm Green on the Warriors bank.

It was a similar piece to that with Reid on Thursday evening against the wolves.

“It is just a habit that he has when someone compacts him and he is smart,” said Kerr. “So I think it has reached Reid, and in the range Draymond somehow hit and pulled the foul. But he has the habit of beating his arm to ensure that the referee saw him, and he has contacted him, and that led to the technology.”

When Green went to the courtyard at halftime, he continued to speak to chief official Tony Brothers. In the second half, Green was not asked for a foul when Minnesota retired.

“It's part of Draymond,” said Kerr. “It is the same that makes him a competitor and a winner, sometimes exaggerated and we know that and it is our job to help him help him to stay able to stay composed. But the competition is so useful for him that it occasionally goes across the border.”

Before game 2, Green played his best basketball of the season and kept his vow to lead to serenity in the last two winnings of the Warriors, in game 7 against Houston and game 1 against Minnesota.

But now Green has to keep out of difficulties with arbitrators for the rest of this series, since he gets closer to an automatic one-game suspension if he specifies the technical foul or flagrant-foul points limit.

“He is an adult man,” said Butler when he was asked if he had to say anything. “He knows how important he is for this squad, how important every game is and how important it is that it has to be out there. Nothing has to say anything. He is very capable and he is very attentive. He knows.”

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