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New York - Rabbi Grossman Tries to Make Peace When Coach Won’t Leave [video]

Published on:   October 18, 2009 10:50 PM
Last updated on: Today 09:04 AM
News Source:  NY Times
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Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, center, intervened after Coach Pini Gershon, left center, of Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv was ejected for two technical fouls in an exhibition against the Knicks.  Photo: video imageRabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, center, intervened after Coach Pini Gershon, left center, of Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv was ejected for two technical fouls in an exhibition against the Knicks.  Photo: video image

New York - So a basketball coach, an N.B.A. referee and a rabbi walk onto the court at Madison Square Garden locked in an argument.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one.

The coach has just been ejected from the game after being called for his second technical foul but refuses to leave the floor. And while the referee, the rabbi and a group of officials in dark suits try to persuade the coach to go to the locker room, the players start an impromptu half-court shooting contest.

The punch line is that this actually happened — during the third quarter of the Knicks’ preseason game against Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv on Sunday.

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With the Knicks well on their way to a 106-91 blowout, Al Harrington was whistled for a charge and began complaining to the referee. Maccabi Coach Pini Gershon took issue with Harrington’s behavior, then proceeded to do the same thing. The referee did not care for Gershon’s comments and gave him the technical.
Rabbi Grossman Tries to Make Peace When Coach Won’t Leave watch below Video

Gershon remained in front of his team’s bench, not far from where the former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert was sitting. It was as if Gershon were preparing to call the next play and put in a couple of substitutes. For a few moments, it seemed as if no one knew what to do with him, until a clutch of league representatives scurried over.

“He wouldn’t leave,” said Scott Jaffer, an N.B.A. security official who spoke with Gershon on the court. “I tried to talk him out of it. They wanted to stop the game.”
Rav Yitzchak Dovid Grosman of Migdal Ohr saying Shema Yisroel and singing Am Yisroel Chai during half time at the Migdal Ohr benefit exhibition game between macabee tel aviv and the new york knicks. See below video

Sometime during the 10-minute discussion in front of the visitors’ bench, Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, with a long white beard, a black hat and a black coat, crossed the court from his seat to intervene.

Grossman is the founder and the president of Migdal Ohr, a center for orphans and abused and underprivileged children in Israel that benefited from the proceeds from Sunday’s game. And he saw it as his duty to moderate.

Not knowing that two technical fouls result in an automatic ejection, he attempted to persuade the referee to change his call and allow Gershon to stay.

Head Coach Pini Geshon of the Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv receives two technical foulsHead Coach Pini Geshon of the Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv receives two technical fouls

“But he says that this is the law, that he must leave,” Grossman said, referring to the referee in broken English.

“What can I do? I tried. I tried to make peace.”

It was at that point that Gershon tried apologizing for his outburst, with Grossman behind him.

“This is not a regular game,” Grossman said he told the officials. “In a game for friendship, you forgive.”

Gershon declined to comment after the game, even though he could have freely criticized the officials without fear of retribution from the league.

“He’s a big person in European basketball, and he probably felt like he was being disrespected,” said Maccabi center Maciej Lampe, a 2003 Knicks draft pick.

While Gershon argued on one side of the court, the Knicks seemed mostly confused on the other. They stood around their bench waiting. So Nate Robinson decided to find out if basketball was going to resume and worked his way into the argument.

“I was over there just trying to figure out what was up,” said Robinson, who added that the coach and the rabbi “started speaking a different language,” which was Hebrew.

“It threw me off,” Robinson said. “I needed a translator.”

In the stands, a vocal majority of yellow-clad Maccabi fans among the 14,602 inside the Garden began chanting emphatically. All afternoon, they had made it feel like a home game for Maccabi — much the way the fans did when Maccabi last played at the Garden two years ago in front of 18,000 fans. They waved Israeli flags, belted soccer-style songs and even booed Knicks Coach Mike D’Antoni.

When Gershon ultimately left, storming down the tunnel, the fans became even louder. Neither their efforts, nor the rabbi’s, had saved his place on the sideline.

“Sometimes, somebody makes a mistake,” Grossman said.


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Read Comments (22)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Oct 19, 2009 at 01:21 AM Anonymous Says:

Hot headed Israelis have to learn that in America rules are rules. This happens a lot when Israelis go abroad.

2

 Oct 19, 2009 at 01:04 AM Anonymous Says:

Go grossman go !!! He's a big tzadik !!! Alwas trys his best to make pice !!

3

 Oct 18, 2009 at 11:43 PM big plaut Says:

sounds like a regular knesset session...just diff uniforms

4

 Oct 19, 2009 at 09:10 AM Anonymous Says:

ok someone has to say it....what a chilul hashem!

5

 Oct 19, 2009 at 09:08 AM Anonymous Says:

Hey, that was real good P.R. and a Kiddush Hashem!

6

 Oct 19, 2009 at 09:37 AM It's So Poshut Says:

Why isn't Pini Geshon prepped about NBA rules before he gets on the plane to coach a game in the U.S.A?

7

 Oct 19, 2009 at 08:37 AM agent emess Says:

I allways said that israelis and americans don't mix oin many levels. Not in shidduchim and now as we see, even in basketball games.

8

 Oct 19, 2009 at 10:14 AM Dan Daoust Says:

The ref was out of his mind. It was an exhibition game, everyone was there to see Maccabi, and he goes and throws out the coach. Whatever Pini said -- and I'm sure it was colorful -- the ref should have pulled himself together and ignored it.

9

 Oct 19, 2009 at 10:28 AM gross man Says:

They should really award HIM the Nobel Peace Prize!...

10

 Oct 19, 2009 at 10:25 AM Anonymous Says:

The referee acted properly. Grossman needs to learn some derech eretz as an ambassador for yiddeshkeit around the world. He knew the game was being played under NBA rules and the expulsion for 2 technicals is somthing my 10 year old could have told you. Why this Rav felt it was his obligation to get involved and seek a "special dispensation" for an ehreleche yid who had violated the rules is indicative of the arrogance powerful yidden exhibit. As the article says, he thought he was a big macher in Europe so the Rav figured he should receive special treatment.

11

 Oct 19, 2009 at 10:46 AM Anonymous Says:

Come on guys, Dont you realize that this is just another way to make ISRAEL look bad, by the NYT???

12

 Oct 19, 2009 at 09:47 AM gross man Says:

Now the're gonna claim that moshe mordechai lelover sent him to make peace in madison square garden, huh?

13

 Oct 19, 2009 at 11:41 AM Shimon Says:

I knew there would be trouble when the Israeli team only dribbled from right to left.

14

 Oct 19, 2009 at 11:55 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #8  
Dan Daoust Says:

The ref was out of his mind. It was an exhibition game, everyone was there to see Maccabi, and he goes and throws out the coach. Whatever Pini said -- and I'm sure it was colorful -- the ref should have pulled himself together and ignored it.

So the coach has no reason to follow the rules and show respect? Because he is Jewish? The typical rules dont apply to him, right?

15

 Oct 19, 2009 at 11:54 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #2  
Anonymous Says:

Go grossman go !!! He's a big tzadik !!! Alwas trys his best to make pice !!

Just like he said.....I felt like I had to intervine, but didnt know the rules...why doesnt anyone mind their own business? he knew nothing about nothing and made it worse.

16

 Oct 19, 2009 at 11:25 AM formally Says:

maybe in Israel coaches are given more leeway when arguing with the referee. here we do not tolerate it. I guess it is a cultural difference.
However, the game is being played here, so NBA rules apply. Maybe someone should have informed him arguing with colorful language will get you kick out.

Good for Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, for settling this matter. Lets not make this more than it is. it is a basketball game

17

 Oct 19, 2009 at 12:13 PM can you read English?? Says:

Reply to #10  
Anonymous Says:

The referee acted properly. Grossman needs to learn some derech eretz as an ambassador for yiddeshkeit around the world. He knew the game was being played under NBA rules and the expulsion for 2 technicals is somthing my 10 year old could have told you. Why this Rav felt it was his obligation to get involved and seek a "special dispensation" for an ehreleche yid who had violated the rules is indicative of the arrogance powerful yidden exhibit. As the article says, he thought he was a big macher in Europe so the Rav figured he should receive special treatment.

You expect Rav Grossman to know the Rules of Basketball??? Even better, basketball in the USA?

Anyone who has ever met or read anything about Rav Grossman would NEVER use arrogance to describe him or his actions. The coach was out of line, Rav Grossman just tried to calm things down and make Shalom as befits a man of his stature when the game was being played for his mosdos.

18

 Oct 19, 2009 at 04:13 PM to #11 Says:

The world does not run on our "fly by the seat of your pants" social skills. When we are in public and make a Chilul Hashem it is percieved as THAT- a Chilul Hashem. I agree it didn't "help" Israel, BUT to blame it on anyone else is ignorant and naive. Hashem put us on this world to live during this time (2009) for the reason of making a Kiddush Hashem not a Chilul Hashem. If we agree to play a game and it doesn't go against Hashem, FOLLOW THE RULES! It is that simple.

19

 Oct 19, 2009 at 04:09 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #10  
Anonymous Says:

The referee acted properly. Grossman needs to learn some derech eretz as an ambassador for yiddeshkeit around the world. He knew the game was being played under NBA rules and the expulsion for 2 technicals is somthing my 10 year old could have told you. Why this Rav felt it was his obligation to get involved and seek a "special dispensation" for an ehreleche yid who had violated the rules is indicative of the arrogance powerful yidden exhibit. As the article says, he thought he was a big macher in Europe so the Rav figured he should receive special treatment.

Sure! Rav Grossman makes Lipa sound like the Queen of England when he speaks English, and since he stands no more than 5'4" I am sure he played pro basketball while in yeshiva. The above is ridiculous.

20

 Oct 19, 2009 at 04:39 PM Milhouse Says:

Reply to #10  
Anonymous Says:

The referee acted properly. Grossman needs to learn some derech eretz as an ambassador for yiddeshkeit around the world. He knew the game was being played under NBA rules and the expulsion for 2 technicals is somthing my 10 year old could have told you. Why this Rav felt it was his obligation to get involved and seek a "special dispensation" for an ehreleche yid who had violated the rules is indicative of the arrogance powerful yidden exhibit. As the article says, he thought he was a big macher in Europe so the Rav figured he should receive special treatment.

First of all, it's HORAV Grossman. He is not your friend. Second of all, Pini Gershon is hardly "an ehreleche yid". You just love using that term for all sorts of posh'ei yisroel, don't you? Third of all, why should R Grossman know the NBA rules? And fourth, why shouldn't he intervene wherever he thinks he might be able to do some good? Why shouldn't the referee have bent a little, and relaxed the precious rules, for the sake of peace and out of respect for the crowd that had come to see Maccabi, not to see him? As the rav said, it's an exhibition game not a competition one, so what is so holy about the rules? What terrible thing will happen if they are bent a bit?

21

 Oct 19, 2009 at 06:35 PM robinson 5"8 Says:

Reply to #9  
gross man Says:

They should really award HIM the Nobel Peace Prize!...

maskim lol

22

 Oct 19, 2009 at 06:33 PM macabee Says:

lets be happy we all had a good a good time theres one thing i loved. the fact that grossman made him self ball habus over there . i had a great time . and what a wonderful kiddush hashem

23

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