Wizards Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton pull pistols on each other
Guess they're still the Bullets at heart. 
NBA all-star
Gilbert Arenas and his Washing ton Wizards teammate Javaris Crittenton
drew guns on each other in the team's locker room during a Christmas
Eve dispute over a gambling debt, The Post has learned.
League
sources say the pistol-packing point guards had heat ers at the ready
inside the Verizon Center, the Washington, DC, home of the Wizards --
whose name was changed from the Bullets over gun- vi olence concerns.
It was the three- time all-star Arenas, 27, who went for his gun first,
sources said, draw ing on the 22-year-old Crit tenton, who quickly
brandished a firearm as well.
It was not clear whether other teammates saw the shocking standoff, which happened on a practice day.
The duel in DC -- unprecedented in sports history -- was sparked when
Critten ton became enraged at the vet eran guard for refusing to make
good on a gambling debt, a source said.
"I'm not your punk!" Crittenton shouted at Arenas, according to a league source close to the Wizards.
That prompted Arenas to draw on Crittenton, who then also grabbed for a gun, league security sources said.
A playground pal of Crittenton's from Atlanta, Kendrick "Bookie Ball"
Long, confirmed the locker-room standoff and said he learned of it
directly from the third-year player out of Georgia Tech.
"He
[Arenas] was f- - -ing with him; he [Crittenton] was just defending
himself!" declared Long, who said the dispute was over money but would
not elaborate.
The Wizards announced on Christmas Day that
Arenas had admitted to bringing guns to the locker room and had turned
them over to team security. No ammunition was handed over.
The NBA club's statement didn't disclose how Wizards officials discovered that Arenas was storing weapons on the job.
But a league source said Arenas' weapons were uncovered only after the confrontation with Crittenton.
Wizards General Manager Ernie Grunfeld declined to comment. "It's in
the hands of [Washington] authorities," said Grunfeld, a former star
Knicks player and president. "We're going to get to the bottom of this,
if there is a bottom to this."
Washington police said they
were investigating Arenas for gun-possession violations. But the
Wizards' gun grab has also drawn the attention of the feds.
"We're working with the Metropolitan Police Department on the
investigation. That's about all we can say at his point," said Ben
Friedman, a spokesman for the US Attorney's Office in DC.
The
feds have been investigating gambling within the NBA since disgraced
ex-referee Tim Donaghy admitted betting on games and feeding
information to bookies. It was not clear whether the gambling debt that
sparked the Arenas-Crittenton duel had anything to do with league
games.
A top players-union official said he was shocked by the
allegations. "This is unprecedented in the history of sports," said
Player's Association Executive Director Billy Hunter. "I've never heard
of players pulling guns on each other in a locker room."
Team
owner Abe Pollin -- his sensitivity heightened by the fatal shooting of
his good friend Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995 -- changed
the club from the Bullets to the Wizards in 1997 because he didn't like
the violent overtones of the original name. Pollin died in November.
Arenas, who has three kids, reportedly told team officials he brought
guns to his Verizon Center locker so they wouldn't be close to his
newborn at their home in Great Falls, Va.
He denied pulling a gun on Crittenton and even mocked the suggestion he would ever point a weapon at a teammate.
"You guys, I wanted to go rob banks, I wanted to be a bank robber on
the weekends," Arenas said sarcastically after a game this week.
Firearm laws in Washington are among the nation's strictest. Until a
recent US Supreme Court ruling, private ownership of guns was illegal
in the nation's capital.
As it stands now, gun owners are
allowed to transport firearms only within DC under very limited
circumstances -- such as taking the weapon to be registered or to a
practice range. There's no provision under current DC law for a private
citizen to have a gun at work.
In 2003, Arenas pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of carrying a concealed weapon in San Francisco.
Arenas claimed the gun was legally registered in Arizona -- where he
was star player for the University of Arizona Wildcats -- and said he
forgot he needed California authorization to carry it there.
Crittenton hasn't played a minute this season for the Wizards and has
struggled to overcome a bone bruise and strained tendons.