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Oakland Raiders head coach Tom Cable is in the news for allegedly slugging defensive assistant Randy Hanson in the jaw a few weeks ago. Sure, Cable’s punch was probably the strongest hit any Raider will make this season, but is it really all that unusual for teammates to mix it up? Here are a few more examples of fisticuffs between teammates:
Although Jordan and Kerr were teammates on the second great Bulls championship run from 1996 to 1998, they didn’t always get along. Kerr and Jordan didn’t agree on the best solution to the labor woes that plagued the NBA at the time, and Kerr felt the other Bulls were too deferential to Jordan. It didn’t help that the two guards often defended each other in practice. At one particularly frisky scrimmage in 1995 the two players began pushing off of each other, and eventually Kerr decided he’d had enough and came up swinging. As Kerr later put it, “I knew I had two choices. Either let it go and be obedient to Michael forever, or fight and probably get my ass kicked. I picked a real winner for my adult fighting debut.”
Jordan gave Kerr a black eye in the dustup, but His Airness was quick to reconcile with the sharpshooter. By the time Kerr got home, Jordan had left an apologetic answering machine message, and the two got along swimmingly after that.
Don’t be fooled into thinking teammates putting up their dukes is a recent phenomenon. Hall of Famer Lajoie may have been one of the greatest second basemen of all time, but his longtime teammate on the Philadelphia Phillies and Cleveland Naps, Elmer Flick, was no slouch, and made the Hall of Fame himself. Lajoie and Flick had long, productive careers playing together, but one day in May 1900 things didn’t look so rosy.
When the Phillies took the field for their game on May 31, 1900, stars Lajoie and Flick were both missing from the lineup. Where were they? Apparently recovering from knocking the tar out of each other. Reports vary on what prompted the fight – some say it came when the fashionable Flick insulted the slovenly Lajoie’s threads, while others claim that Flick enraged Lajoie by using the second baseman’s bat – but it’s clear that the two knocked the stuffing out of each other. Flick gave Lajoie a black eye and a cut on his face, and Lajoie allegedly socked Flick’s noggin so hard that he broke a bone in his punching hand.
Although Flick allegedly threatened to leave the Phillies immediately after the fight, he and Lajoie eventually reconciled, and Lajoie served as Flick’s manager with Cleveland from 1905 to 1909.
Perhaps the most memorable teammate fight in recent memory came during the Carolina Panthers’ 2008 training camp. Star wideout Steve Smith and cornerback Ken Lucas routinely lined up across from each other in scrimmages, and although the two men were known to talk a bit of trash across the line, things got out of hand while they were watching a special teams drill from the sidelines. The jawing turned into a fight, and the diminutive Smith broke Lucas’ nose and gave him a black eye. Although Smith quickly apologized, the Panthers suspended the mercurial receiver for two games. (Maybe because this wasn’t a first-time thing for Smith; he’d also punched teammate Anthony Bright during a film session in 2002.)
Lucas eventually forgave Smith completely, and when Smith scored his first touchdown of the 2008 season, he gave the ball to Lucas.
At least most of the other throwdowns on this list happened behind closed doors. Dyer and Bowyer, teammates on the English soccer team Newcastle United, took their disagreement to the pitch. Late in a 2005 game with Aston Villa, teammates Bowyer and Dyer started going at it in the middle of the game. Although it wasn’t clear exactly what started the punch-up, the two had to be separated; even concerned Aston Villa players helped pull Bowyer and Dyer apart. Both players received red cards and suspensions, and since Bowyer threw the first punch he had to go through the British court system for disturbing public order. Have a look for yourself:
You’ve got to hand it to retired point guard Scott Skiles; he didn’t back down from anyone. In 1994, he even went out of his way to irritate a teammate who was nearly a foot taller and 150 pounds heavier than he was, a young second-year center named Shaquille O’Neal. Shaq later said that Skiles annoyed him because, “He was like a little gnat. He just used to talk too much. Talk about nothing.”
At a practice in Los Angeles during a road trip, Shaq eventually got so fed up with Skiles’ chirping that he took a swing at the point guard. Reports vary on whether the Skiles-Shaq fisticuffs actually sprang from a fight the Big Aristotle was having with backup Larry Krystkowiak, but O’Neal and Skiles later admitted that Shaq connected with a punch at Skiles, then wrestled the smaller man to the gym floor. Once teammates pulled them apart there was no bad blood, though, and the two men now speak of each other in fairly glowing terms.
* * * * *
Obviously, these are just a few instances of pugilistic teammates. Do you have any favorites we missed? Michael Barrett vs. Carlos Zambrano, perhaps? Bill Romanowski vs. Marcus Williams?
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Wasn’t Roger Staubach punched by one of his backups once?
posted by Witty Nickname on 8-20-2009 at 10:24 am
Yes! Roger was sucker punched by Clint Longley, a backup quarterback. He was cut the next day.
posted by Jay on 8-20-2009 at 10:35 am
Buddy Ryan punched one of his assistants (Kevin Gilbride) while he was the head coach of the Houston Oilers.
posted by Dan on 8-20-2009 at 10:47 am
I think Michael Westbrook sucker punched Steven Davis when they were team mates for the Redskins. I believe Westbrook got his payback when he thought he was good enough for MMA and got CLOCKED in his first or second fight.
posted by Andre Mack on 8-20-2009 at 12:10 pm
April 20, 1979 — Cliff Johnson and Rich \Goose\ Gossage get into a scuffle in the Yankees’ clubhouse, resulting in a torn ligament in Gossage’s right thumb. He missed almost three months, and the two-time defending Bronx Bombers finished the year in fourth place. There was talk that the Baltimore Orioles were going to vote Johnson as their team MVP that year!
posted by wboenig on 8-20-2009 at 12:16 pm
Hmmmm…
A couple more come to mind
-Washington Redskins WR Michael Westbrook beating down RB Stephen Davis during training camp
-San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds choking Jeff Kent in the dugout during a game a couple of years back
posted by Goliath The Pickle on 8-20-2009 at 12:47 pm
“-San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds choking Jeff Kent in the dugout during a game a couple of years back”
Wow. Who could you possibly root for in that fight? I’d bet none of their teammates tried to break that one up.
posted by Wallis Lane on 8-20-2009 at 1:48 pm
What about Kevin Greene attacking his coach, Kevin Steele?! That was fantastic… a player attacking his coach!
posted by Scottyocable on 8-20-2009 at 3:07 pm
If we’re expanding this to fights between players and coaches, then someone has to bring up Latrell Sprewell.
posted by Jim on 8-20-2009 at 3:17 pm
Didnt Barry Bonds get in a fight with some team mate in the dugout during a game…..must have been the roid rage
posted by dre on 8-20-2009 at 3:38 pm
Didn’t Latrell Spreewell get choked out by his coach (or was it vice versa)?
ReCaptcha: virtuous is (how apropos!)
posted by Steve from San Diego on 8-20-2009 at 4:14 pm
Spree chocked PJ Carlisemo during practice when he was playing for the Warriors.
Super swell guy.
posted by Bryan on 8-20-2009 at 7:15 pm
Manny Rameriez and Kevin Youkilis got into a fight in the Boston Red Sox dugout last year (or maybe it was the year before?)
posted by Rick in Portland on 8-20-2009 at 8:24 pm
When right fielder Darryl Strawberry punched first baseman Keith Hernandez during spring training one year, someone later quipped that it was “the only time he ever hit the cut-off man.”
posted by Karl Weber on 8-20-2009 at 8:36 pm
Joe Tinker and Frank Chance, who played shortstop and first base in the famous Chicago Cubs infield of Tinker, Evers, and Chance won the World Series together in 1907, but despised each other. According to legend, Evers had to play second base in order to stay between Tinker and Chance.
posted by Steven Ramold on 8-20-2009 at 11:07 pm
Not many remember it, but in the late 70s, Dodgers Don Sutton and Steve Garvey got into a locker room scuffle late in the season. It was the first indication that not everybody was enamored of the “All-American Boy” image of Garvey.
Quick correction of a post above: Buddy Ryan wasn’t the head coach of the Oilers when he punched Gilbride on the sidelines. He was the defensive coordinator and Gilbride was the offensive coordinator.
posted by mpcincal on 8-21-2009 at 5:37 am
Im sure there were a few Billy Martin dustups with his fellow Yankees.
posted by Jack on 8-21-2009 at 11:32 am