The Cavaliers busted out the brooms and blown out the Hawks in Game 4 to complete the sweep of the Eastern Conference Finals on Tuesady night. But that didn’t mean Atlanta didn’t get one last parting shot on their way out of the postseason.
One of the major storylines of the Conference Finals was Matthew Dellavedova’s hotly debated intense brand of play that saw Kyle Korver injured after one collision and Al Horford ejected after another. Hawks radio announcer Steve Holman apparently didn’t take too kindly to Delly’s rough and tumble play, because he referred to him “Tonya Harding” on the Hawks radio broadcast.
Dellavedova checks into the game for Kyrie Irving. Hawks radio broadcast says "Tonya Harding" checking in.
— Chris Mannix (@SIChrisMannix) May 27, 2015
We need more of this good, old-fashioned sports hate in our local announcing these days. It’s not quite the days of Johnny Most frothing at the mouth to get at Bill Laimbeer, but it’s a start. But for Delly’s sake, I just hope he doesn’t delve into the world of Celebrity Boxing 20 years from now.
H/T Sporting News

Comments are closed.
Recent Posts
John Buccigross signs multi-year extension with ESPN
The longtime SportsCenter anchor has been a major voice of hockey for ESPN on both the NHL and NCAA sides.
Scottie Scheffler calls out ‘terrible question’ from reporter at the Masters
"That's just a terrible question. Next question. Awful."
John Goodman-narrated open, Jim Nantz welcome CBS viewers to the Masters
"Generation to generation to generation, Augusta National remains an American treasure. A gift to the game."
Don Orsillo delivers electric ‘Holy Sheets!’ call on Padres walk-off home run
"A THREE-RUN HOME RUN TO WALK IT OFF! SECOND STRAIGHT NIGHT FOR SAN DIEGO! HOLY SHEETS!"
Mark Jones plans to stay with Kings ‘a long, long time’ after leaving ESPN
Jones told the Sacramento Bee he isn't going anywhere, even if his future role with the Kings isn't fully defined yet.
JJ Redick calls out media for doubting Lakers this season
"I know none of you guys had us in the top four to start the season. That's just the reality."