The Rebel wrote:Mr Puddles wrote:Nate505 wrote:It was a complete and total screw job. Good for the players for not accepting those medals
It was clearly a screw-up from the refs, clearly, but it still seems childish to not show up for the medal ceremony. It's not like this is the first time in sports history that the refs made a mistake. If every team that felt wronged by the refs didn't show up for the medal ceremony we'd be looking at a lot of empty stages.
At the end of the day, the US made a tactical error on that last inbound play and ended up losing the game - even with the refs' screw-up they still had the lead with three seconds to go, they have themselves to blame for defending that last play poorly.
I understand the geopolitical situation at the time adds more context to this, but it seems childish and salty to not show up IMO.
It was no mistake, the refs were from east Germany and Romania which were both close Soviet allies.
I could be convinced that it was simple mistakes if not for allowing illegal substitutions and forcing the US player away from guarding the inbound play.
Regarding the illegal substitution: under Fiba rules you can only substitute during a time-out, since team USA claims that no time-out was ever called the substitution was therefore illegal. The Soviets claimed they called a time-out and that they could thus substitute.
Again, it's not clearly visible in the video if a timeout was called or not - but logic would dictate the Soviet Union would call a timeout on that play. It would be a colossal coaching error. Apparently, the Soviets also had a set inbound play for this (the one they executed) because the two players had run this play a number of times before at CSKA Moscow.
I personally find it far more likely that a timeout was called than that it wasn't and therefore the substitution should have been allowed as well.
Regarding forcing McMillan away from the inbound player:I don't see this happening. The ref is drawing the line with his hand, this is a pretty common practice for refs. The fact that McMillan doesn't simply take a step back and continues to try to interfere but instead seems to run back and wave for his teammates to wave back as well also makes me believe that this wasn't the refs doing.
Again, I don't see the 'evidence' for this game being rigged like was argued by the OP.
Question:If the refs were really in cahoots to let the Soviets win, why send Doug Collins - arguably the US's best free throw shooter - to the line? Wouldn't it have been much easier to call a travel or something or just swallow their whistle on that last play? Or call a foul on team USA on the Soviet player who turned over the ball leading to the Collins free throw attempts? Instead of coming up with this elaborate clock and time-out scheme?