Chris Paul‘s return to Phoenix was cut short on Wednesday night, as the Warriors guard was assessed with a pair of technical fouls and ejected from the game during the final minute of the second quarter. The referee who handed out those technicals was Paul’s longtime nemesis Scott Foster, as Kendra Andrews of ESPN.com writes.
“It’s personal,” Paul said. “We had a situation some years ago and it’s personal. The league knows. Everybody knows. There’s been a meeting and all of that. … I’m OK with a ref saying whatever they’re saying, but don’t use a tech to get your point across.”
While Paul’s teammates and head coach Steve Kerr generally agreed that the veteran guard earned his first technical by complaining about a foul call, they took issue with Foster’s decision to hit him with a second technical just seconds later. Foster said after the game that both technicals were for “unsportsmanlike conduct” (Twitter link via Kellan Olson of Arizona Sports).
“I didn’t think Chris deserved to be ejected,” Kerr said. “The first tech, absolutely. But I thought the second one was unnecessary. Everybody gets frustrated out there.”
“When both player and ref engage in conversation, that has to stay there,” Stephen Curry said. “I told Scott that after he ejected him. There are certain situations where players overstep. There are times when you know you have to back off. But when both are engaging, I don’t like that.”
As Andrews details, Paul’s former teams lost 13 games in a row in which Foster was the crew chief, and he has a 3-17 playoff record in games that Foster has officiated. CP3’s teams were favored in 15 of those 20 contests, according to Tom Habertstroh (Substack link).
According to Andrews, the animosity between Paul and Foster may have originated during the guard’s stint with the Clippers. In his media session following Wednesday’s loss, Paul mentioned an incident involving his son and Foster from that time, adding that it led to a meeting that included him, his father, Foster, and former Clippers head coach Doc Rivers, among others (Twitter video link via NBC Sports Bay Area).
Paul declined to go into further detail about that incident, suggesting that he’ll simply need to avoid putting himself in position to be T’d up in future games that Foster officiates.
“I’ve got to do a better job at staying there for my teammates, but it is what it is,” he said, per Andrews. “I’ll probably see [Foster] in a Game 7 sometime soon.”