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Is Moussa Diabate Suspended? NBA Could Rule Soon

Charlotte Hornets Moussa Diabate during an NBA game.

If you’re trying to figure out whetherMoussa Diabaté is about to be suspended, you’re not alone, because the Hornets big man was at the center of the play that ignited Monday night’s benches-clearing fight against the Detroit Pistons.

As of Wednesday morning (Feb. 11), the NBA still hadn’t publicly announced any discipline stemming from the incident, which produced four ejections (Diabaté and Miles Bridges for Charlotte; Jalen Duren andIsaiah Stewart for Detroit).

For the full blow-by-blow of how the brawl unfolded,here’s Heavy’s earlier coverage.

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BENCHES CLEAR IN PISTONS-HORNETS 😲

Moussa Diabate, Miles Bridges, Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart were all ejected following the altercation during Pistons-Hornets.

What started the Hornets-Pistons fight, and why Diabaté is the name to watch

The sequence that turned the game into a headline began with a hard foul in the lane by Diabaté on Duren in the third quarter. Duren shoved Diabaté, Diabaté swung back, and the confrontation escalated into a wider melee that spilled across the floor.

Diabatésaid he “lost control” after Duren contacted his face.

That first flashpoint matters for Charlotte because when the NBA reviews these incidents, it’s not only judgingwho threw what; it’s also judging instigation, escalation, and whether players left the bench area.

And Diabaté isn’t just a “deep bench” storyline. He’s been a real part of Charlotte’s identity this season, posting 8.2 points and 8.6 rebounds per game while shooting 63.2% from the field.

The NBA rulebook precedent that makes a suspension feel imminent

Here’s the cleanest, most defensible hook for an “impending” discipline post: the NBA has explicit minimums for certain fight behaviors, and the league’s own rules say suspensions begin before the start of the player’s next game.

Two rulebook points drive why a ruling can land quickly:

Leaving the bench area during an altercation (for players not participating in the game) triggers a minimum one-game suspension under NBA Rule No. 12.

Throwing a punch (whether it connects or not) is treated as an unsportsmanlike act and carries a minimum one-game suspension after review/confirmation.

The league still has discretion on length — minimum doesn’t mean maximum — but those floors make it difficult to imagineno suspensions when multiple players were ejected in a prolonged fight.

Why the timing matters for Charlotte

The Hornets’ urgency angle isn’t just “this went viral.” It’s logistical. With Charlotte scheduled to play again Wednesday night, discipline arriving today would fit how the NBA typically structures these announcements: review the video, finalize penalties, and have suspensions begin with the next game on the schedule.

For Diabaté specifically, a one-game (or longer) absence would ripple into:

frontcourt minutes and rebounding (he’s been one of Charlotte’s top board guys this year)

matchup planning vs. Atlanta (a team Charlotte just played in a high-scoring win over the weekend)

rotation stability if multiple Hornets are disciplined in the same ruling

What to watch for when the NBA announcement drops

When the NBA posts the official penalties, the details that usually explain the “why” are the ones that show up in the language: punching, escalating, leaving the bench, or failing to disengage. That wording is your clue to why someone got the minimum, or why the league went beyond it.

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