In the NBA, that was Kobe Bryant with 15. Rasheed Wallace and Baron Davis were tied for second with 13.
In the NBA, there is no cap on the total number of technical fouls you get during the season. But the NBA has penalties after you receive certain technical foul totals. After the 15th technical foul a player receives during the season, he is suspended for 1 game without pay. Consequently that player is suspended 1 game without pay for every other technical during the remainder of the season. So if a player burns up his 2 possible technicals during the first 8 games of the season, his total techs will be 16. He would then miss the following game. With that rule in place, it's only possible for a player to get 74 technicals total getting his maximum 2 techs per game and factoring in suspensions after the first 15.
Well, in the NBA during a game he will be "injected" from the game once he committed 2 technicals, meaning he cannot participate in the rest of the game, he can't even sit on the bench, he has to leave. And a person cannot get 8 technicals, because they'll get suspended once they get 7 technicals, this can happen during the finals and the season.
Rasheed Wallace and Dennis Rodman most probably. Rasheed Wallace had 41 technical fouls (a record) in the 2000-2001 season. Rodman is also known for his numerous ejections and technicals. It will change after the 2010-2011 season though, because the NBA is so strict now.
KG
Magic Johnson holds the record. Technical fouls were not held as an official stat until a later date, so many earlier players like Wilt Chaimberlain did not have their technical fouls counted.
Wilt Chamberlin
Kevin davies.
Dwight Howard
the player fouls out ,and is out the rest of the game
on player can have up to four fowls if they get 5 they are out of the game, and they are when a player slaps or hitts the other players arms (from hand to shoulder), or when a player blocks another player and moves they feet :-)
Team fouls are the total fouls that all the players together committed. Personal fouls are each player individually.
No, in the NBA a player has to reach 6 fouls before he's "fouled out".