Welcome to the second rendition of The Floppies, SI.com’s annual tradition of recognizing the very best in foul simulations. In case you missed it, last year’s inaugural version can be found here.
The NBA’s anti-flopping program, unveiled in October 2012, was brought back in the same form for the 2013-14 season. All players are allowed one free warning before the fines, which start at $5,000, and go up from there.
Although Rod Thorn took over from Stu Jackson as the head of the NBA discipline this season, not much has changed when it comes to the flopping program. Here’s how the numbers compare from year-to-year:
2012-13 season: 24 flopping violations by 19 players on 13 teams; 5 fines totaling $25,000
2013-14 season: 33 flopping violations by 27 players on 19 teams; 6 fines totaling $30,000
The comparison reveals that flop warnings are up, somewhat, why the flop fines are just about level.
While the flop warnings spiked slightly, the fines still amount to absolute peanuts by NBA standards. Consider that Knicks guard J.R. Smith was fined $50,000 for attempting to untie an opponent’s shoelaces (after being warned not to), which is nearly double the amount that every NBA player combined has been fined for flopping this season.
What’s even more frustrating about the program is that we’re now two seasons in and zero players have accumulated three flops in the same season, thereby triggering a $10,000 fine. Consider this: Rockets guard James Harden received two flop violations in Houston’s first seven games. Since then? He has somehow managed to play more than 2,000 minutes and shoot nearly 600 free throws over 63 games without doing anything that violates the league’s anti-flopping policy. That seems… unlikely.
As noted earlier this month, The Point Forward believes it’s time that new commissioner Adam Silver either gets serious about the anti-flopping program, or ditches it.
Enough ranting. Let’s get on with The Floppies, our flopping-centric year-end awards and a countdown the top 10 flops of the season.
Floppers of the Year (team): Timberwolves
Minnesota had one player fined for two
violations (Corey Brewer) and two others warned (Kevin Love and Kevin
Martin). Yes, I’m as shocked as you are that J.J. Barea made it through
an entire season without a single flop violation. In any case, the
Timberwolves’ total of four flops ties them with the Pacers (two for
Lance Stephenson, one each for Ian Mahinmi and C.J. Watson) for the
league lead. The tiebreaker? Minnesota actually had three total
violations last year, placing them high on the 2012-13 leaderboard, too.
These rebels simply have no desire to conform.
Flopper of the Year (individual): P.J. Tucker, Suns
As noted, six players have been warned twice
this season: Harden, Tucker, Brewer, Stephenson, Mario Chalmers (Heat)
and Brandon Jennings (Pistons). None of those players succeeded in
placing two different flops on this year’s top 10 list, in large part
because there was such a deep crop of flops from which to choose from.
Tucker came the closest, though. His first violation came as he veered
out of control and crashed to the ground after light contact from LeBron James.
On the second, shown below, Tucker threw himself into the basket
stanchion, which is really going above and beyond. The kicker here? The
two flops occurred within a week of each other.
Flop of the Year (individual): D.J. Augustin, Bulls
Enjoy his work of art below…
Without further ado, here are The Point
Forward’s top 10 flops of 2013-14. Only officially designated flops were
eligible for consideration. The absurdity of each play was the chief
criterion in developing these rankings, with bonus points given to arm
and head flailing, spinning, overreacting to zero contact, and
uniqueness.
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