OT: Huge Brawl at the End of the Kansas-Kansas State Game

Submitted by BursleyHall82 on January 21st, 2020 at 9:14 PM

Whoa. This was awful. Malice at the Palace, Part 2.

Don't know how to embed video but click to see it HERE.

uferfan

January 21st, 2020 at 9:38 PM ^

I challenge you to rewatch the end of that Pistons-Pacers game to jog your memory and then watch this again. This was about a 5 on the chaos meter. The night at the Palace was an 11.

MGoStretch

January 21st, 2020 at 10:06 PM ^

In this, the Kansas dude picks up a chair and it gets pulled away.  In the Palace, fans were literally pulling chairs out of their anchors to throw them at players.  Also, I know the first guy who got jacked in the face by Stephen Jackson (brother of a friend from high school), so that's another difference.

MGoStretch

January 22nd, 2020 at 12:46 AM ^

As a matter of fact, he is not, but Ron Artest and Stephen Jackson thought he was.

He was actually an innocent dude who really, really regretted his expensive tickets that night. If you knew your Malice history, you’d recall that the charging pacers actually went after the wrong guys who just happened to be in the vicinity.

outsidethebox

January 22nd, 2020 at 9:17 AM ^

Life is interesting and each of us are informed by our individual experiences. I worked as a pediatric nurse for more than a few years at Peyton Manning Children's Hospital...in Indy. Ron Artest was our most-liked, favorite celebrity visitor to our kids-he was such a delight...so gracious, humble and engaging. And just as counter-intuitively, Peyton was an ass. 

ijohnb

January 22nd, 2020 at 10:29 AM ^

It just still bugs me that, on balance, Ron Artest was the most responsible for that entire melee all things considered, but somehow has almost been remembered as a "victim" in all of it.  Don't commit a flagrant with 40 seconds left.  Don't lay on the scorer's table in between team benched.  When you get something thrown at you, have perspective that nothing would have hit you if you had just walked away back to the bench after Wallace retaliated and that you can't punch a spectator.  It is always "Ben Wallace freaked out."  Or "the guy that threw the cup had it coming" and "damn those Detroit fans." 

No, Ron Artest acted like a five year old and that is the proximate cause of the Malice at the Palace.

/End rant.  I do believe you that he was gracious and engaging at the hospital, though.

daddylox

January 22nd, 2020 at 12:14 PM ^

Uhhhh. While I am not the man, I am definitely friends with that one who threw the drink. Definitely under the influence.  Lifetime palace ban. And a lot of days in court. It was no joke. 
 

Edit:  oops. Not the guy who hit arrest with the drink. My friend through the cup at ONeal in the aisle and got laid out cold. 

mackbru

January 21st, 2020 at 9:39 PM ^

Malice was a brutal and widespread fight between multiple players and fans. It spilled deep into the stands, included extreme violence, went on FOREVER, spread all over the place, and threatened to turn an entire arena into a cage-match. 

Aside from the chair, which wasn't actually used, tonight's fight was fairly garden variety by NBA brawl standards. A few punches were thrown and a couple guys got knocked down. But mostly it was a bunch of guys posturing. And it was contained and over within a minute or two.

ijohnb

January 22nd, 2020 at 10:54 AM ^

What is crazy about the Malice at the Palace was that a lot of those players/coaches on those two teams, specifically, were very close through different degrees of past involvement.  Carlisle was the Pistons' coach only a year and a half before that and had coached most of those players.  Larry Brown was kind of iconic to the Pacers and had coached Reggie Miller and other Pacers still on that team.  Rasheed Wallace was good friends with a number of Pacers, Rip Hamilton and Steven Jackson were also friends, and those are two guys who were largely on the outskirts of the action until the end, and it appeared they were actually the ones ramping each other up.  It was a case where I think familiarity made the emotions stronger in the entire situation, including with the fans.

One other interesting note about that incident, Tashuan Prince is the only player or coach that never left the bench, not once, not even when fans and players were fighting right behind him.  Just stood there and looked at everybody like "ya'll are CRAZY."

Eli

January 21st, 2020 at 9:41 PM ^

Dude it was not bad at all. Just some bitch slaps and wild punches. The Kansas player when he stood over him was prolly like "you shouldn't a been talking shit" haha!. 

The Palace fight was way worse. If you think this was bad, you have been sheltered my man. 

badandboujee

January 22nd, 2020 at 9:14 AM ^

After re watching the Palace brawl, I agree it was worse. But I've been watching college basketball for years and don't remember a brawl like this. Maybe I am sheltered, I don't belong to any fight clubs

rob f

January 21st, 2020 at 10:58 PM ^

There was no innocence involved whatsoever when he picked up the chair, he's damn lucky someone behind him saw what he potentially was going to do with that chair and immediately knocked it out of his hands.

He's likely in jail for aggravated assault if not for the preventive actions of someone else. 

NittanyFan

January 21st, 2020 at 10:46 PM ^

YEP!  I've never fully figured out embedding videos on this site, but all one needs to do is search "Mike Milbury shoe" and the video comes up.

And as to why shoe is involved in the search --- Milbury was one of the Bruins who was in the stands.  He grabbed a fan, took off the fan's shoe, and literally whacked the guy upside the head with it!