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NBA finally lets Draymond Green back. Watch and explore 6 incidents that led up to his suspension

Draymond Green was suspended for 12 games from the NBA after hitting another player in the face—but this isn't his first rodeo. Here's what he's done before.
Credit: AP
Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green celebrates after scoring against the Dallas Mavericks. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Draymond Green has been reinstated by the NBA from his suspension after the Golden State Warriors star missed 12 games for hitting Phoenix center Jusuf Nurkic in the face on Dec. 12.

 The league says Green “demonstrated his commitment to conforming his conduct to standards expected of NBA players” during his suspension, which began Dec. 14. He has met with a counselor as well as had multiple joint meetings with representatives of the league, the Warriors and the National Basketball Players Association. 

Those meetings, the league added, will continue throughout the season. The Warriors have gone 7-5 without Green, who was also suspended five games in November for placing Minnesota center Rudy Gobert in a headlock.

RELATED: Draymond Green reinstated from suspension by NBA after missing 12 games

The penalty handed down by operations chief Joe Dumars in December was Green's second suspension this season.

“He will be required to meet certain league and team conditions before he returns to play,” the league said in announcing the suspension. The NBA noted that “this outcome takes into account Green’s repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts.”

The 33-year-old Green, part of four Warriors championships, was ejected for the 18th time in his career — most among active NBA players.

Here are notable incidents with video in Green's history before his latest suspension:

December 25, 2013

One of Draymond Green's first suspensions in his NBA career came during a game he played with the Warriors against the Los Angeles Clippers on Dec. 25, 2013

Green was ejected after hitting Clippers player Blake Griffin in the face with his elbow—for which he received a flagrant 2 foul.

Griffin was also ejected after scuffling with player Andrew Bogut while Griffin chased Green to the showers, though the NBA later said Griffin's ejection was a mistake.

The NBA also fined Green $15,000 for failing to leave the court in a timely manner after his ejection.

(Watch the incident at 0:36 of the video) 

June 10, 2016

Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Golden State Warriors ended with Green suspended for hitting LeBron James in the groin.

The Warriors wound up losing in seven games. Then-GM Bob Myers sat with Green next door to Oracle Arena at the Oakland Coliseum for that game Green missed.

October 5, 2022

Green got into controversy after a video circulated online of an Oct. 5, 2022 Warriors practice where he got into an altercation with teammate Jordan Poole.

The altercation led to Green hitting Poole in the face, and though he wasn't suspended, Green was fined by his team.

Coach Steve Kerr described it at the time as the biggest crisis he's had since joining the team as head coach. Green apologized to Poole after the altercation.

READ MORE: Video leaked from Draymond Green punching Jordan Poole in Warriors practice | ABC10

April 17, 2023

During Game 2 of the Warriors and Sacramento Kings playoff series in Sacramento, Green stomped on the chest of Domantas Sabonis and was suspended one game.

He was given a Flagrant Foul 2 and ejected from the game while Sabonis was given a technical foul for grabbing and holding Green's ankle after falling on the floor.

The Warriors player missed the first Chase Center game of the playoff series because of the suspension.

It wasn't Green's first time receiving a suspension during a playoff series, as he got benched for one game amid the 2016 Finals for too many flagrant fouls.

WATCH MORE: Your Points: Sacramento Kings fans on Draymond Green incident | To The Point

November 14, 2023

Kerr said he agreed with a November five-game suspension of Green when he "took it too far" and was "wrong" in putting Minnesota Timberwolves' player Rudy Gobert in a headlock.

The altercation occurred before two minutes had elapsed in the first quarter on Tuesday, when Golden State’s Klay Thompson and Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels got in a shoving match near midcourt following a Timberwolves possession. Gobert stepped in and grabbed hold of Thompson before Green rushed in and pulled Gobert away from behind with his arm around the center’s neck in what the league called “an unsportsmanlike and dangerous manner.”

“I didn’t have a problem with him getting Rudy off of Klay because the rule of thumb is you don’t put your hands on another player on the other team... But he’s got to let go. He hung on for six, seven seconds, and it was a terrible visual for the league, for Draymond, for everybody,” Kerr said.

Thompson’s jersey was ripped during the scuffle, and he, Green and McDaniels were all ejected.

Like his recent indefinite suspension, an NBA spokesperson said Green's history of unsportsmanlike acts factored into the then-five-day suspension.

December 12, 2023

It was a frustrating evening made worse when Green was ejected once again after hitting Jusuf Nurkic in the face while the two were battling for position in the third quarter.

It was less than a month since Green was suspended five games by the NBA for putting Minnesota’s Rudy Gobert into a headlock during an altercation in November.

“He was pulling my hip and I was swinging away to sell the call,” Green explained. “I made contact with him. As you know, I'm not one to apologize for things I meant to do, but I do apologize to Jusuf, because I didn't intend to hit him.”

Green's 18th ejection, most among active players, was another bewildering moment for the veteran forward. It could lead to further discipline, especially because the league cited Green's history of unsportsmanlike acts when issuing its previous penalty.

“We need him, we need Draymond,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “He knows that, we’ve talked to him. He’s got to find a way to keep his poise and be out there for his teammates.”

Green's outburst seemingly came out of nowhere. He and Nurkic were battling for position early in the third when the two got a little tangled. Green appeared to slightly lose his balance, but then inexplicably wheeled around and smacked Nurkic in the face with his right hand.

“What's going on him, I don't know,” Nurkic said. “Personally, I feel like that brother needs help. I'm glad he didn't try to choke me ... That had nothing to do with basketball. I’m just out there trying to play basketball.”

Watch more: Compilation of Draymond Green's suspension-worthy actions | NBA on ESPN

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