honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 13, 2009

NBA: Arenas, Wizards fined $25K apiece for his silence


By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writer

WASHINGTON — The NBA is making Gilbert Arenas — and the Washington Wizards — pay for his silence.

Arenas and his team were fined $25,000 apiece Tuesday by the league because he has not been talking to the media during the preseason, including before and after exhibition games.
The three-time All-Star point guard became one of the NBA’s most popular players thanks in part to his engaging personality and a willingness to speak his mind, including via a wide-ranging blog.
But he stopped producing the blog and steadfastly has been refusing to do interviews since the Wizards held their official media day on Sept. 28. Asked by a reporter last week when he’d begin speaking again, Arenas said it would happen only after the NBA tells him he has to talk.
It was at that media day that Arenas signaled his intention to keep quiet, declaring, “I’m not the entertainer anymore.”
“I don’t feel like speaking anymore. I just want to go out there and play,” he said that day. “If I’m not going to get fined, I don’t think you’re going to hear me again. I don’t have a blog. I don’t have a tweeter. When I was entertaining, all you guys focused on was my words. Now I’d rather you just focus on my basketball.”
Team spokesman Scott Hall said Tuesday that neither Arenas nor the Wizards would have any comment on the fines. The Wizards were in Grand Rapids, Mich., to play an exhibition game against the Detroit Pistons on Tuesday night.
Arenas is returning after playing a total of only 15 games during the past two seasons following three operations on his left knee over 1› years. The last surgery came in September 2008, and later that month, Arenas ducked out of Washington’s media day without talking — drawing fines of $15,000 each for him and his team.
Arenas is entering the second season of an $111 million, six-year contract.
His health is considered key to the Wizards’ turning things around after a 19-63 season in 2008-09.