![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4DGw7K-bnjOlJ7BMzzknhWebI9N0DKE6wjdCD2EwRnWmV_LhoAt7GbB34yVAHjhuet-f9wOUYp4sE_uEcInFFoKjCZuqEoSQ8DkxxZPR-zBHZFWEVObONb9QBFWd0wsfREefX8IYnuWc/s1600/kelly.olynyk.kevin.love.arm.bar.png)
Kendrick Perkins wanted to rough up Jae Crowder, so he pushed him in the chest. J.R. Smith was also annoyed with Crowder, and he smacked him in the face. Those are the kind of things you do when you're pissed off at a guy. Yet Love is implying that Olynyk (who does not have a single technical or flagrant foul in his NBA career) thought something like:
"Hmm, I want to hurt this guy, what should I do? I know, I'll grab his arm, pull it at a certain angle, and maybe his shoulder will pop out of his socket. Yeah, that sounds good."
If Olynyk is that sneaky/brilliant/conniving, he's clearly done an unbelievable job to this point in hiding the fact that he's some sort of evil genius.
Those plays happen all the time in the NBA (including pictured above moments earlier in the same game between the same two players in reverse roles), the results in this case were just very unfortunate.
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