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  1. #326
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    Let me just say that the nice thing about all of this is the reffing next year should be top notch. Mike Mathis (former NBA ref) was on ESPN and Jim Rome's show where he called out the league for not doing enough to ensure good officiating. He said that the 30 people used in the stands to oversee officials during games is a joke and that most of them aren't qualified enough to judge the quality of officiating. He also layed heavily into the "good old boy" network at the league office where people have been hired and "advanced" to the playoffs not because of their quality of officiating, but because of their friendships. That can be evidence enough if you look at the majority of refs for the Finals. Mainly Javie, Salvatore, Mauer, Crawford, Bavetta, and Rush (his being in the Finals is proof enough on how the best refs don't make it).
    I think Mathis is making himself the poster boy for the anti-conspiracy camp.

    If there ever was an official who stood to gain from outing a conspiracy, it's Mathis. He's obviously perfectly willing to comment about the league's officials in a negative way. He's a guy who was among the top officials in the game until he retired. He officiated 12 Finals games during his career, which means that he was among the best and most trusted officials -- certainly someone who would seem to be perfectly positioned to know about a conspiracy.

    That he hasn't said anything about it, I think, speaks volumes to debunk any conspiracy theory.

    As for the rest of the points made by Catharsis, I suppose that we'll always have differences in the way that we view officials. I once despised Javie, but it's clear to me that he's among the most accurate officials in the game on a night-to-night basis. He's definitely not afraid to make a big call against a home team in a big moment, which should be lauded and not scorned.

    I'm not sure which "Crawford" Catharsis is speaking of, but both Joey and Danny Crawford are excellent play-calling officials and generally very consistent within their own styles. Danny Crawford definitely tends to be reluctant to call minor or incidental contact, but he's consistent with that approach.

    I agree that it's probably time for Bavetta and Rush to be moved aside for the Finals.

    Rush has never impressed me in any way. His most memorable call as an official was calling Michael Jordan and setting him up with some barfly that Rush was trying to impress.

    I think the league's perception of Bavetta has slipped, if it's any consolation. He wasn't going to call Game 7 of the Finals this year.

  2. #327
    Orange Whip? Orange Whip? Viva Las Espuelas's Avatar
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    13 pages of :
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?
    pete and repeat walk in the store. pete comes out. who's left?


    ..................

  3. #328
    5. timvp's Avatar
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    I think the answer to the ref problem is to clone Danny Crawford 45 times and let Danny and the Clones ref every game.

    To me, he's easily the best ref in the league. He lets teams actually play basketball and basically just stays out of the way. When he does blow his whistle, he's almost always right. He doesn't try to become part of the show or call technicals to get onto SportsCenter.

  4. #329
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    July 25, 2007

    Sports of The Times

    N.B.A. Put Referees Above the Law

    By SELENA ROBERTS

    In a black suit and blue tie, wearing the colors of bruises, the typically grand David Stern arrived at a mic yesterday with the reduced look of an image viewed through binocular bottoms.

    He was not haughty and pithy, but haunted and meek. He was not himself. Stern spoke softly — often with awkward pauses — as he explained what the N.B.A. knew of the F.B.I.’s investigation into whether the referee Tim Donaghy fixed games over the past two seasons.

    Yes, the league’s internal security network of former “Dragnet” types and ex-spooks and retired spies missed detecting this scoundrel with a shady whistle.

    No, he didn’t know Donaghy was at the center of an investigation into point shaving — the great taboo of sports — until the F.B.I. called the league June 20.

    “My reaction was, ‘I can’t believe it’s happening to us,’ ” Stern said.

    What’s not to fathom, though? Stern’s league has been rendered vulnerable by its longtime system of ref protectionism and false empowerment.

    This goes beyond the unconditional defenses Stern has offered on behalf of referees
    who muss Pat Riley’s hair gel or rattle Phil Jackson’s Zen with a dubious call.

    This is about ethical compromises the league has made over the years that have cultivated the God complexes of referees and provided a petri dish perfect to develop a rogue official.

    Donaghy isn’t known to be among the nearly 20 N.B.A. referees in the late ’90s who caught the attention of I.R.S. investigators by exchanging first-class tickets for coach and pocketing a tax-free difference.

    He was a witness to Stern’s response, though. In a sign of how deficient the N.B.A. officiating pool is, the league reinstated about a half-dozen of the tax cheats.

    Why wouldn’t referees feel above the law if the league offered them loopholes in integrity?

    The N.B.A. would go on to be hoodwinked by its blind faith in a flawed ref. In January 2005, Donaghy was questioned by the league for his part in a legal dispute with a neighbor near his home outside Philadelphia. A private eye from the league’s security department was directed to nose around Donaghy, to check out rumors of gambling and poke into the anger problems at issue.

    The snooping came up dry. And Donaghy delivered a denial.

    “He informed us that the allegations against him were untrue,” Stern said. “And that he was the person that was being harassed by his neighbor, not as alleged by the neighbor, that he was harassing the neighbor.”

    The league believed Donaghy, its unimpeachable ref.

    Stern has never conceded a human element in officiating. To him, the referees are always above reproach and su ion. And yet the relationship between coaches, players and officials has become increasingly antagonistic in recent years.

    Some players and coaches quietly point to a class differential that has grown exponentially over the last decade. As Stern noted, Donaghy pulled in a solid salary of $260,000 last year — or a week’s pay for star players and some coaches. Does anger or envy ever figure into a call?

    The league’s officiating monitors are numbers freaks — how many calls are made, rate of technical fouls, etc. — but they do not measure each referee’s conscience.

    For years, coaches have complained about referees who ask players for autographed shoes or request a star’s attendance at a charity golf event or pal around with a team after hours. In 2002, through court do ents filed by Karla Knafel, a former mistress of Michael Jordan’s, the referee Eddie F. Rush was portrayed as the cupid for the secret lovers.

    “I feel comfortable with his explanation,” Stu Jackson, the N.B.A.’s vice president, said at the time. “Do I feel there is a problem? Absolutely not.”

    Or maybe there was an issue. In 2004, there was an official codification of fraternization rules. Yet a year later, the policy was waived when the referee Bob Delaney enlisted N.B.A. stars for scrimmages to attract paying customers to his basketball camp at IMG Academies in Bradenton, Fla.

    This ref-player relationship may seem too cozy to be cool, but the league always offers its refs the benefit of the doubt. Many of them are good citizens and good people.

    But here, in his worst hour as commissioner yesterday, with his face pale from stress, Stern was still extolling the virtues of his officials with few qualifiers.

    “Sometimes they perhaps carry themselves in a way that is not as modest as we would prefer, but they do their darnedest to get the result right,” Stern said. “And frankly, I’m more concerned, rather than chastising them, with reassuring them that I am committed to protecting them while at the same time making sure that we keep our covenant with our fans.”

    The promise of purity was clouded long ago, when the league put referees above the law, when Stern continued to deify them without regard to their human faults, when Donaghy was cutting his teeth.

    Protectionism isn’t what referees need. Protectionism is how the league got into this fix.

    E-mail: [email protected]

  5. #330
    Hedo Layup Drill ShoogarBear's Avatar
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    Oh, good lord. The NBA doesn't protect its officials any more than the NFL or MLB do. All of these "I knew this would happen" articles are pathetic.

  6. #331
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    I think the answer to the ref problem is to clone Danny Crawford 45 times and let Danny and the Clones ref every game.

    To me, he's easily the best ref in the league. He lets teams actually play basketball and basically just stays out of the way. When he does blow his whistle, he's almost always right. He doesn't try to become part of the show or call technicals to get onto SportsCenter.
    I'd accept Danny Crawford for the reasons that you cite, but I'd also take Mike Callahan. I actually think he's better and more consistent than Crawford.

    It tells me a lot that Callahan is truly an elite official who nobody knows about -- I'll never be able to actually prove it, but I have good reason to think that he was in line to officiate Game 7 of the Finals in 2006, had that game made (it was going to be some combination of Mauer, Nies, Bavetta, Callahan, and Fryer -- I figure it was Bavetta, Callahan, and Fryer {shudder}).

    Anyway, nobody ever seems to about anything that Callahan does. Fans of finesse teams don't hate him; fans of physical teams don't hate him. Coaches don't yell at him much. Aside from my own observations, that truth is pretty solid evidence to me that Callahan is really good at what he does.

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