Former NBA player
Micheal Ray Richardson was suspended by the Continental
Basketball Association on Wednesday for anti-Semitic
comments the Albany Patroons' coach made in a
newspaper interview. Richardson will miss the rest of
the CBA's best-of-five championship series after he told the
Albany Times Union that he had ''big-time Jew
lawyers'' working for him.
''They got a lot
of power in this world, you know what I mean? Which I
think is great,'' Richardson told the Times-Union.
''I don't think there's nothing wrong with it. If you
look in most professional sports, they're run by
Jewish people. If you look at a lot of most successful
corporations and stuff, more businesses, they're run
by Jewish. It's not a knock, but they are some crafty
people.''
The paper also
reported that Richardson yelled at a heckler, using
profanity and a gay slur, at Tuesday's game 1 of the
championship series against Yakima. Albany lost the
first game at home. Game 2 was Wednesday night.
Patroons owner
Ben Fernandez denounced Richardson's comments. During his
suspension, the league is investigating the allegations
against Richardson. ''We will not tolerate--and
the league will not tolerate--bigots,''
Fernandez said.
Richardson will
not be allowed to watch the team practice or be present
at any of the games. ''It's terrible and I don't think it's
fair,'' Richardson said. ''But I want to make an
apology if I offended anyone, because that's not me.''
Assistant coach
Derrick Rowland took over in Richardson's absence.
The Patroons
apologized to the public in a release issued Wednesday.
''The Albany Patroons' organization sincerely apologizes to
any individuals or ethnic groups that these alleged
statements may have offended.''
Richardson was
the fourth overall pick in the 1978 draft. He joined the
NBA out of Montana and played eight seasons with the New
York Knicks, Golden State Warriors, and New Jersey
Nets.
His NBA career
ended because of drug use in 1986, when NBA commissioner
David Stern banned Richardson for life after he violated the
league's drug policy three times.
Richardson began
his comeback in 1988, joining the ranks of ex-NBA
players in European leagues. His right to play in the NBA
was restored that year, but he stayed in Italy, where
he was a leading scorer and fan favorite.
Richardson failed
two cocaine tests in 1991, though he disputed the
results. (AP)