I didn't like the KG foul. Four minutes into the game, it's stupid to pick up your second foul on a play like that. The game was still close, and after that play, the Magic went on a mini-run, led largely by Rashard Lewis (i.e., the guy KG should have been guarding). Not to mention, that should have been a technical foul, as well.
We won, so it's all good. However, we need KG's head to be in the game, and he was out of control at that moment. There are ways to make your presence known without repeatedly karate chopping your opponent right in front of an official. Like, for instance, the "accidental" elbow throw when coming down with a rebound.
In a word, KG needs to be smarter. Intensity is good, but not when it hurts the team on the floor.
Roy, while I normally agree with you on most issues, and I do agree with you that the timing was poor in terms of when during the game it happened and KG already having a foul, in retrospect it was worth it because it sent a message to Howard, the refs KG's fellow teammates,the Magic as a team and the fans.
The message it sent to Howard was obvious: keep your bleeping hands off of me, or I will retaliate and the refs won't T me up for it (which they would have done to Perk, Sheed, Baby or any other Celtic except possibly Ray), and if they do, I don't care. I believe that KG was in total control of his emotions (as he often is when he's acting whacky) and calculatingly hit him both times, especially the second time when he didn't get called the first time. I believe that he was more than ready to accept the T if it came to send the message that we won't put up with this crap anymore.
The message it sent to the refs was, we're not going to take Howard's dirty play anymore, and if you don't take care of it, I'll take care of it, so go ahead, T me up, and given the furor after game 5, you don't have the sack to eject ME because of the crap that will rain down upon you from above (Stern, et al.)
The message it sent to his teammates was, OK, I will stand up to the Bully as the emotional leader of this team, consequences be [dang]ed. And the message it sent to the fans was, OK, we're not rolling over, so don't you.
Was it the classiest move KG could have done and an appropriate response to the hand check proportionally speaking and the best timing wise? Perhaps not, but it was effective and warranted given the totality of the circumstances and the mayhem done by Howard in the games leading up to this one. When you're playing a dirty player, if you want to survive you get dirty too.
Way to go KG. You used your status in the league to send a message without getting T'd. Someone needed to do it, and it could have been a lot worse given the climate epitomized in the Borges article. (intersting aside that Borges also writes about professional boxing)