Vorbemerkung
von bbsr.de: Der gut Phil sollte in Zukunft etwas besser
recherchieren, dann wüßte er, dass die NBA-Schiedsrichter
sich direkt nach Spielende das Video des gerade gepfiffenen
Spiels mit dem Beobachter anschauen!Someone really ought to send a tape of last Thursday's Lakers-Timberwolves
playoff game to the three refs who worked the contest.
Why?
Because they sure didn't see it.
Referees Ronnie Nunn, Leroy Richardson and
Bill Spooner botched so many calls in favor of the Lakers
during the closing minutes of that game that the Timberwolves, who clearly
deserved to win, almost didn't. The most blatant error came when Minnesota's
Wally Szczerbiak was called for a foul on a drive to the basket
by Lakers guard Jannero Pargo (don't worry, if you didn't
realize the Lakers even had a guard named Jannero Pargo, you're like 99 percent
of NBA fans) even though the T-Wolves forward clearly never touched Pargo. Even
NBA commissioner David Stern, a master of spin control, had to
admit the refs blew that one. "Guess what," Stern said. "We make mistakes."
Let's pause for a moment to make the obligatory and valid defense of all
officials: Refereeing is a thankless job. A ref can -- and usually does -- make
99 of 100 calls correctly, yet the only one we remember is the one he got wrong.
Referees are only human, and human error is part of sport. Officials have to
make decisions in the blink of an eye, without the slow-motion instant replays
that fans have at home. Professional refs, for the most part, make fewer
mistakes at their job than most of us do at ours.
Still, there's something different about the NBA. When referees and umpires
in other sports make mistakes, they're dismissed as simple, infrequent examples
of human error. When NBA officials miss calls, the conspiracy theorists come
out. You could almost hear the callers around the country dialing up their
favorite sports radio talk shows Friday night, getting ready to complain that
the referees' "mistakes" were evidence that the league wants the high-profile,
big-market Lakers to win.
You'll find no accusations here about the integrity of the league's refs, but
it's easy to see where the suspicions come from. The problem is that NBA
referees don't just call what they see. Whether or not they blow their whistle
often seems to be a function of the game situation or the stature of the
individuals involved. There's no secret that when a marquee player like
Tracy McGrady gets bumped on the way to the basket, a foul is
far more likely to be called than when a journeyman like Tracy
Murray draws the same contact. A veteran gets the benefit of more calls
than a rookie, a starter gets more calls than a substitute, and a star gets more
calls than a starter. There's not a player or coach in the league who would deny
that -- and, privately, neither would most referees.
Then there's the postseason, when NBA officials allow more contact than they
do during the regular season. The league seems to take a certain macho pride in
this, as though it separates the men from the boys. But in reality it's as
absurd and unfair as it would be if baseball umpires widened their strike zones
during the playoffs, or football officials decided to relax the pass
interference rules in the postseason.
Stern and the others in the league office tend to get understandably
irritated at the suggestion that the NBA in any way encourages its referees to
give even slightly preferential treatment to one team or one player over
another. But until the league and its refs start treating a foul in December the
same as a foul in April, until they decide that Michael Jordan
shouldn't get better treatment than Michael Curry, those
suspicions will always be out there.
Senior writer Phil Taylor, who used to cover the NBA for
Sports
Illustrated, writes about a Hot Button topic every Monday on SI.com.
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