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FromWayDowntown
08-01-2014, 10:42 AM
494246609882841089

This is a couple of years past due and it seems the league has wanted him gone for a while. Usually when the old war horses among the officials come to the end of the line, they're allowed to bow out fairly gracefully once they're no longer considered elite officials; they continue to work regular season games as crew chiefs and they get at least some second round playoff work. Bavetta hasn't worked a playoff game in 2 years and hasn't worked beyond the first round since 2010. He worked 50 games this past season but was the crew chief only in his last game -- a completely meaningless game between Boston and Cleveland.

The league has been telling him for a while that it's time to go; Dick apparently got the message.

james evans
08-01-2014, 10:49 AM
I would rather that name be "joey crawford".

baseline bum
08-01-2014, 11:12 AM
Should have been gone 15 years ago. Waving off that Eisley three in Game 6 of the 98 Finals has to be the worst call in the history of the league.

InRareForm
08-01-2014, 11:35 AM
I thought he was minimum 80

T Park
08-01-2014, 01:10 PM
Praise Jesus. Violet Palmer next.

Shastafarian
08-01-2014, 01:19 PM
Dick Bavetta is still alive???

-21-
08-01-2014, 01:35 PM
He should have done this a while ago. Congratulations to him for a long career though.

phxspurfan
08-01-2014, 01:49 PM
peace out, Knick Bavetta!

superbigtime
08-01-2014, 03:10 PM
Can't wait to forget this old fool. What a shitbag.

Chris
08-01-2014, 03:20 PM
Crawford wanted the game over quickly so he could kick back, relax, and have a beer; [Dick Bavetta] wanted it to keep going so he could hear his name on TV. He actually paid an American Airlines employee to watch all the games he worked and write down everything the TV commentators said about him. No matter how late the game was over, he'd wake her up for a full report. He loved the attention.

That very first time Jack and I bet on an NBA game, Dick was on the court. The team we picked lost the game, but it covered the large point spread and that's how we won the money. Because of the matchup that night, I had some notion of who might win the game, but that's not why I was confident enough to pull the trigger and pick the other team. The real reason I picked the losing team was that I was just about certain they would cover the spread, no matter how badly they played. That is where Dick Bavetta comes into the picture.

From my earliest involvement with Bavetta, I learned that he likes to keep games close, and that when a team gets down by double-digit points, he helps the players save face. He accomplishes this act of mercy by quietly, and frequently, blowing the whistle on the team that's having the better night. Team fouls suddenly become one-sided between the contestants, and the score begins to tighten up. That's the way Dick Bavetta referees a game — and everyone in the league knew it.

Fellow referee Danny Crawford attended Michael Jordan's Flight School Camp years ago and later told me that he had long conversations with other referees and NBA players about how Bavetta propped up weak teams. Danny told me that Jordan himself said that everyone in the league knew that Bavetta cheated in games and that the players and coaches just hoped he would be cheating for them on game night. Cheating? That's a very strong word to use in any sentence that includes the name Dick Bavetta. Is the conscious act of helping a team crawl back into a contest "cheating"? The credo of referees from high school to the NBA is "call them like you see them." Of course, that's a lot different than purposely calling more fouls against one team as opposed to another. Did Bavetta have a hidden agenda? Or was he the ultimate company man, making sure the NBA and its fans got a competitive game most times he was on
the court?

Studying under Dick Bavetta for 13 years was like pursuing a graduate degree in advanced game manipulation. He knew how to marshal the tempo and tone of a game better than any referee in the league, by far. He also knew how to take subtle — and not so subtle — cues from the NBA front office and extend a playoff series or, worse yet, change the complexion of that series.

The 2002 Western Conference Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Sacramento Kings presents a stunning example of game and series manipulation at its ugliest. As the teams prepared for Game 6 at the Staples Center, Sacramento had a 3–2 lead in the series. The referees assigned to work Game 6 were Dick Bavetta, Bob Delaney, and Ted Bernhardt. As soon as the referees for the game were chosen, the rest of us knew immediately that there would be a Game 7. A prolonged series was good for the league, good for the networks, and good for the game. Oh, and one more thing: it was great for the big-market, star-studded Los Angeles Lakers.

In the pregame meeting prior to Game 6, the league office sent down word that certain calls — calls that would have benefitted the Lakers — were being missed by the referees. This was the type of not-so-subtle information that I and other referees were left to interpret. After receiving the dispatch, Bavetta openly talked about the fact that the league wanted a Game 7.

"If we give the benefit of the calls to the team that's down in the series, nobody's going to complain. The series will be even at three apiece, and then the better team can win Game 7," Bavetta stated.

As history shows, Sacramento lost Game 6 in a wild come-from-behind thriller that saw the Lakers repeatedly sent to the foul line by the referees. For other NBA referees watching the game on television, it was a shameful performance by Bavetta's crew, one of the most poorly officiated games of all time.

The 2002 series certainly wasn't the first or last time Bavetta weighed in on an important game. He also worked Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference Finals between the Lakers and the Trail Blazers. The Lakers were down by 13 at the start of the fourth quarter when Bavetta went to work. The Lakers outscored Portland 31–13 in the fourth quarter and went on to win the game and the series. It certainly didn't hurt the Lakers that they got to shoot 37 free throws compared to a paltry 16 for the Trail Blazers.

Two weeks before the 2003–04 season ended, Bavetta and I were assigned to officiate a game in Oakland. That afternoon before the tip-off, we were discussing an upcoming game on our schedule. It was the last regular-season game we were scheduled to work, pitting Denver against San Antonio. Denver had lost a game a few weeks prior because of a mistake made by the referees, a loss that could be the difference between them making or missing the playoffs. Bavetta told me Denver needed the win and that it would look bad for the staff and the league if the Nuggets missed the playoffs by one game. There were still a few games left on the schedule before the end of the season, and the standings could potentially change. But on that day in Oakland, Bavetta looked at me and casually stated, "Denver will win if they need the game. That's why I'm on it."

I was thinking, How is Denver going to win on the road in San Antonio? At the time, the Spurs were arguably the best team in the league. Bavetta answered my question before it was asked.

"Duncan will be on the bench with three fouls within the first five minutes of the game," he calmly stated.

Bavetta went on to inform me that it wasn't the first time the NBA assigned him to a game for a specific purpose. He cited examples, including the 1993 playoff series when he put New Jersey guard Drazen Petrovic on the bench with quick fouls to help Cleveland beat the Nets. He also spoke openly about the 2002 Los Angeles–Sacramento series and called himself the NBA's "go-to guy."

As it turned out, Denver didn't need the win after all; they locked up a spot in the playoffs before they got to San Antonio. In a twist of fate, it was the Spurs that ended up needing the win to have a shot at the division title, and Bavetta generously accommodated. In our pregame meeting, he talked about how important the game was to San Antonio and how meaningless it was to Denver, and that San Antonio was going to get the benefit of the calls that night. Armed with this inside information, I called Jack Concannon before the game and told him to bet the Spurs.

To no surprise, we won big. San Antonio blew Denver out of the building that evening, winning by 26 points. When Jack called me the following morning, he expressed amazement at the way an NBA game could be manipulated. Sobering, yes; amazing, no. That's how the game is played in the National Basketball Association.

In a follow-up email to the referee staff and the league office, Crawford railed about the lack of respect players had for referees and the NBA's failure to back him up. Then, in a direct shot at the league's embracing of referees like Dick Bavetta, he fired a sharp rebuke:

"I also told [Stu Jackson] that the staff is an officiating staff of Dick Bavetta's — schmoozing and sucking people's asses to get ahead. Awful, but it is reality."

Crawford also touched on the fact that he was being excluded from working the playoffs that year:

"Look on the bright side everybody, MORE playoff games for you guys and Dick, maybe you will get to be crew chief in the 7th game of the Finals, which is a travesty in itself you even being in the Finals."

Juggity
08-01-2014, 04:39 PM
Bavetta wasn't nearly as bad as Tony Brothers tbh. Hardly the worst ref in the league.

timtonymanu
08-01-2014, 04:43 PM
Can he take Salvatore and Brothers with him, please?

mudyez
08-01-2014, 04:50 PM
Chris, pretty sure I read this before...its from Dim Donaghy's book or something, isn't it?

TheGreatYacht
08-01-2014, 04:56 PM
Scott Foster, Ed Malloy, Bill Kennedy, Danny Crawford, Tony Brothers, Ken Mauer, and Tom Washington should take notes

howbouthemspurs
08-01-2014, 07:56 PM
I wonder if Sir Charles is going to kiss him farewell...

KaiRMD1
08-01-2014, 10:05 PM
That's one ol' sport

Obstructed_View
08-01-2014, 10:21 PM
Can he take Kennedy and Brothers with him, please?

admiralsnackbar
08-02-2014, 02:45 AM
Au revoire, Lo Pan.

exstatic
08-02-2014, 08:01 AM
...and the Coyote wins mascot of the year. Coincidence? I think not.

"The wolf is gone!"

Chris
08-02-2014, 02:58 PM
Chris, pretty sure I read this before...its from Dim Donaghy's book or something, isn't it?

Yep, that was Donaghy!

illusioNtEk
08-02-2014, 05:43 PM
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