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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, May 29, 2010

Artest shows up late for Lakers' practice

 •  Celtics clinch Eastern crown


Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Ron Artest, left, was 30 minutes late for practice. "Ron has a penchant for little things tripping him up," said Lakers coach Phil Jackson.

SUE OGROCKI | Associated Press

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EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — Ron Artest had perfect timing in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals — and not so much the next day.

Artest was fined by the Los Angeles Lakers yesterday for showing up late to practice a day after his buzzer-beating layup clinched their 103-101 victory over the Phoenix Suns.

Lakers coach Phil Jackson said it was an innocent mix-up by the forward, who showed up 30 minutes late. Artest misread the practice starting time on the locker room dry-erase board in the excitement following Thursday's win.

"It was just one of those nights," said Jackson, who didn't disclose the amount of the fine. "I think he was just so excited after the game that all that processing and things that were on the board there didn't all register."

Artest was fined an undisclosed amount by the Lakers for showing up late to practice on May 7 after he failed to tell team officials he was at a funeral.

"Ron has a penchant for little things tripping him up," Jackson said. "Those type of things are the things that continually follow him, so he is kind of dogged by his own nature."

Artest scored just four points in Game 5, missing seven of his first eight shots — including two ill-advised jumpers in the final seconds, infuriating the home crowd and Jackson. But Artest then won it for the Lakers on his rebound of Kobe Bryant's missed 3-point attempt, bringing the same crowd to its feet.

"I don't mind being in the outhouse," Artest said. "I don't mind being the goat. I don't mind being the villain, hated. I've been that my whole career, so it's not like that's anything new. I don't mind people jumping on the bandwagon or jumping off. I just focus on playing the game."

After his high-arching layup got through the hoop, Artest celebrated with his teammates and a few record-executive friends who have courtside seats. But he ran off the court before even going through the usual postgame television interviews, and the Lakers had to fetch him from the locker room for interviews in which he mostly downplayed the shot.

After Artest left Staples Center, he had a late vegan dinner and went to a sports club near his house to work out for another hour until they kicked him out, the forward said with a grin. It's all part of Artest's self-acknowledged inability to enjoy the moment.

And yesterday, he was seething about comments made by Phoenix point guard Steve Nash following Thursday night's game. Nash reiterated his statement yesterday, and drew Artest's ire.

"I just said we're going home and win Game 6 and come back in Game 7," Nash said after practice. "Take it how you want to take it."

Artest fired back: "That's like no respect for us. There's no respect. That's how it's been for a long time this season. I'm sure we'll talk about it. Coaches have no respect for the Lakers at all. They have no respect for me. The players don't respect — a lot of the guys don't respect. ... I'm sure Kobe heard that (what Nash said), and I'm sure he'll do his part tomorrow."