<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">EL SEGUNDO - Chris Kaman used the word "punish" to describe the Clippers' game plan against the Phoenix Suns' small lineup. Steve Nash disagreed with Mike Dunleavy, when the Clippers coach said his team threw a better defense at the Suns in Game 2. But if that is considered trash talk, then both the Clippers and Suns need a crash course in verbal bravado. While the Clippers find themselves in a series knotted 1-1, the same position the Lakers were in against the Suns in the first round, the tenor of this series with Game 3 tonight at Staples Center is much different because there's no trash talking. In the Lakers' series, Kobe Bryant and Raja Bell traded insults on a daily basis. In the Clippers' series, the players sound more like they're engaged in a gentlemen's game of croquet, not a physical Western Conference semifinal. No personalities have clashed in this series, and that's new for both teams. Bell had his deal with Bryant, and on the Clippers' side, Kaman had a big problem with the Nuggets' Reggie Evans in the first round. But now, the Clippers center hardly sees a problem with the Suns. "The dirtiest guy they probably have is Raja Bell, and he's not dirty at all," Kaman said. "He just plays real hard and flops." </div> Source
This guy's referring to the Kobe-Raja nonsense as good trashtalking? <div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">"The dirtiest guy they probably have is Raja Bell, and he's not dirty at all," Kaman said. "He just plays real hard and flops." </div> Thought that was funny.