NEW YORK -- The WNBA punished so many players for their roles in this week's skirmish that the league is staggering the suspensions by alphabetical order.
"None of us can recall an incident like this," WNBA president Donna Orender said Thursday during a conference call.
The league suspended Detroit assistant coach Rick Mahorn and 10 players following the dustup between the Shock and the visiting Los Angeles Sparks on Tuesday.
Shock forward Plenette Pierson was suspended for four games, the harshest penalty, for initiating and escalating the altercation.
"In our opinion, Plenette was the aggressor," said Renee Brown, the WNBA's chief of basketball operations and player relations
Mahorn was suspended for two games, as were Shannon Bobbitt and Murriel Page of the Sparks, for the incident at The Palace of Auburn Hills.
"As a team, we're incensed that Rick Mahorn was suspended," Detroit coach Bill Laimbeer said in a telephone interview with the Associated Press from Houston, where the Shock were scheduled to play the Comets. "He was trying to be a peacemaker and now he's being thrown under the bus."
Brown said Mahorn only started off as a peacemaker before he shoved Sparks star Lisa Leslie.
"Then he took it a step too far," she said. "When he pushed Lisa, it escalated the situation."
Players suspended for one game included Detroit's Kara Braxton, Tasha Humphrey, Elaine Powell and Sheri Sam, along with Los Angeles' Leslie, Candace Parker and DeLisha Milton-Jones.
Four of the suspended Shock players and Mahorn began serving their suspensions on Thursday night, where Detroit played Houston. Sam was on the active roster, but the Shock were left with eight players for the game, including 50-year-old Nancy Lieberman, who signed a seven-day contract on Thursday.
Lieberman, the Shock's former coach and general manager, was going to play on Thursday only and Laimbeer said the Shock would sign another player to replace Ford on Friday.
Lieberman said her signing was more than just a publicity stunt aimed at directing attention away from Tuesday's fight.
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service