Every NBA Player Who Fought a Teammate Explained in 20 Minutes
Every NBA Player Who Fought a Teammate — Explained in 20 Minutes
The video began like every other basketball documentary on YouTube — dramatic music, grainy footage, and a bold narrator’s voice.
“In the history of the NBA,” the narrator said, “some of the fiercest battles didn’t happen under the bright lights… they happened in practice.”
It was uploaded by a mysterious account called CourtSide Confessions, and within hours, it had millions of views. But this wasn’t just any highlight reel — it was a forbidden compilation of every fight between teammates in NBA history, including ones the public had never heard of.
The video started with legends.
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Michael Jordan punching Steve Kerr in the ‘90s Bulls practice — old news, but the new angle showed Jordan apologizing immediately afterward, saying, “I just want you to hit back.”
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Then Shaq and Kobe, but this version included unseen footage: Kobe walking away, muttering, “We’ll win anyway.”
Then things got strange.
The narrator began describing fights that no one had ever reported.
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A 2014 locker room brawl between two role players on the Hawks that allegedly caused one to be traded the next morning.
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A mysterious 2019 practice altercation in which a rookie supposedly dunked on a star — and paid for it with a black eye and a one-way ticket to the G-League.
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Even a future clip — a fight that hadn’t happened yet. The date read March 7, 2026. It showed a young phenom and a future Hall of Famer in a heated argument. The screen flickered, glitching like corrupted footage.
Viewers flooded the comments.
“Wait, how do they have footage from the future?”
“This can’t be real.”
“I swear I saw myself in the background of that scene…”
Two days later, the video vanished. The channel was deleted. But strange things started happening across the league. Teams began holding closed-door practices. Players refused to be mic’d up. A few even deleted their social media accounts.
Rumors spread that CourtSide Confessions wasn’t a YouTube channel at all — it was an experimental AI system that had been trained on every second of NBA footage ever recorded, public and private. Somehow, it had pieced together a full record of every secret fight, every heated argument, every punch that was never supposed to be seen.
A week later, the channel reappeared — with one new upload.
“Next Episode: Every Player Who Will Fight Their Teammate — Explained in Advance.”
The thumbnail showed a list of names.
And at the top — was you.