That is indeed the point I'm making. It is the refs. Honestly, as much as I personally despise the way I think the Spurs are allowed to push the rules (and even outright abuse them at times), I don't blame them directly. I think the Spurs are smart. I think Popovich is smart, and I think he understands all the contradictions, inadequacies, flaws, and grey areas inherent in the NBA's vague-as- rule book.
I think he has studied them like no other coach in the league, always with an eye to defense. And I think he has actually constructed an extremely sophisticated philosophy for his team that absolutely involves pushing the envelope on the rule book. The Spurs are literally a direct assault on the rule book, rather than an assault on any of the individual teams in the league.
In a twisted way, I guess I actually admire Popovich & the Spurs for their compe ive spirit, their willingness to seize any and every subtle advantage that the game offers. But mostly I can't help feeling that the Spurs' approach to the game is a perversion & subversion of the spirit of the game, an underhanded attempt to cheat the game rather than beat the opponent outright. Surely even Spurs fans can admit that they don't have much real talent beyond your "Big 3." It's mostly a lot of aging role players, and the cast changes almost every year.
So, yes. Again, I do blame the refs. Absolutely. I want what any NBA fan wants from the refs: consistency and fairness. Unfortunately, we currently have an official rule book that allows about as much subjective freedom of interpretation as the Bible, and a corps of refs who are inconsistent, incompetent, and dishonest (100% of them, by the admission of the ing commissioner). Yes, it's the refs. the refs. I wanted them all fired after last season ... I wanted them all investigated after the playoffs ... I almost wanted them executed after the scandals ...