WuTang_OG wrote:
Overrated!!!
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WuTang_OG wrote:
DowJones wrote:xxSnEaKyPxx wrote:DowJones wrote:
I am good with that as long as they call Indiana for a flagrant for swiping at Strus’ face so hard that it actually drew blood from his mouth and nose. While we are at it, can we get a flagrant called on Myles Turner for sliding under the feet of Evan Mobley, knocking him out for game 2 and possibly beyond?
*sigh* whatever man.
Both teams can argue about calls or missed calls during the course of the game. Only one team can complain about a phantom call with 10 seconds left that had a direct impact. Now, had Indiana been called for a phantom foul on Merrill’s last second heave, you would have an argument.
jbk1234 wrote:yoadknux wrote:Gordon wrote:Cavs were gassed at the end, but still feel like they win this if not for bad officiating. Nesmith should have been called for lane violation on a putback dunk, and then potentially for flagrant on Mitchell afterwards. Mitchell also deserved flagrant for revenge on the ensuing possession, but the worst call was last foul on Haliburton which was non-existant.
Mitchell got to the line 21 times. Really think we're not gonna find one wrong call on him throughout the game?
There were a couple of soft calls, but you don't make that call with less than 10 seconds left, especially when Haliburton was clearly hunting for it.
jbk1234 wrote:yoadknux wrote:Gordon wrote:Cavs were gassed at the end, but still feel like they win this if not for bad officiating. Nesmith should have been called for lane violation on a putback dunk, and then potentially for flagrant on Mitchell afterwards. Mitchell also deserved flagrant for revenge on the ensuing possession, but the worst call was last foul on Haliburton which was non-existant.
Mitchell got to the line 21 times. Really think we're not gonna find one wrong call on him throughout the game?
There were a couple of soft calls, but you don't make that call with less than 10 seconds left, especially when Haliburton was clearly hunting for it.
DowJones wrote:xxSnEaKyPxx wrote:DowJones wrote:
I am good with that as long as they call Indiana for a flagrant for swiping at Strus’ face so hard that it actually drew blood from his mouth and nose. While we are at it, can we get a flagrant called on Myles Turner for sliding under the feet of Evan Mobley, knocking him out for game 2 and possibly beyond?
*sigh* whatever man.
Both teams can argue about calls or missed calls during the course of the game. Only one team can complain about a phantom call with 10 seconds left that had a direct impact. Now, had Indiana been called for a phantom foul on Merrill’s last second heave, you would have an argument.

Drakeem wrote:Tbh, against elite teams there will be times where the plan to play the "right way" just won't be available. Unfortunately this Cavs team got decimated with injuries again this year, but at some point you're going to need your guy to be able to take those oppertunities and turn them into a made shot when nothing is working.jars wrote:threethehardway wrote:
Every fan of the "true PG" likes to tell themselves this when in reality, their "true PG" doesn't have the bag to get a shot whenever they want.
If Hali could drop 25 on 60 TS a game, he would but he can't. It's been 3 years.
He doesn't draw free throws, he doesn't have simple ways to generate offense, he isn't that crafty of a guy.
He's a bread and butter pick and roll PG that shoots 3s and makes the right pass.
Why are you saying this like it is a bad thing? Being elite in the pick and roll, hitting teammates with good passes and being a competent 3 point shooter leading to a high quality offense is literally the idea "true PG". Teams don't need to be constructed around outdated isolation players like it is the late 90s. Your takes reek of someone who lives for instagram reels.
Hali is a great player, but I do always wonder that against the Bostons/OKCs/etc if he can be the one to have a 3-5 minute period where he kinda wills the team past a shooting slump until they find their footing again. Every team is going to run into stretches where they can't get a good look, but generally the top tier players can turn that bad shot into a shot that has a reasonable percentage of going in.
We'll see in the next round I guess, barring Boston and NYC losing key players on their side too. I like this Indiana team, but I want them to be tested against the juggernauts before I can call them a true contender.

Pacers_Freak wrote:jbk1234 wrote:yoadknux wrote:Mitchell got to the line 21 times. Really think we're not gonna find one wrong call on him throughout the game?
There were a couple of soft calls, but you don't make that call with less than 10 seconds left, especially when Haliburton was clearly hunting for it.
I agree that it was a soft call. I've always disagreed with the notion you officiate differently at the end of the game. 2 points in the last 10 seconds and 2 points in the 2nd quarter count the same. As a competitor I always wanted a consistent whistle the whole game so I would know how to play. If you are going to call it tight all game then I want a tight whistle at the end and if you are going to let us play, let us play the whole way. It was a weak call and as a Pacer fan I can fully admit that. Just don't agree with the 10 seconds left part.

drstarheel wrote:Tony Brothers is known to call playoff games way more tightly than all the other refs. That's why there were 64 total foul shots in Game 2 and only 33 in Game 1. So while I don't think the final foul on Haliburton should normally be called it was 100% being called within the context of this particular game. Mitchell understood this as well as anyone and consequently attacked the rim relentlessly.
If anything, I think calling the games so tightly hurts the Pacers game plan to wear the opponents down by going up-tempo.

littlerock2277 wrote:BigDan245 wrote:
The one time I agree with Stephen A. Garland needs to play last time we seen him he was acting very cocky talking about other player’s defence. Cavs can’t win a championship like this if there players are going to be getting hurt during the playoffs.
jbk1234 wrote:Pacers_Freak wrote:jbk1234 wrote:
There were a couple of soft calls, but you don't make that call with less than 10 seconds left, especially when Haliburton was clearly hunting for it.
I agree that it was a soft call. I've always disagreed with the notion you officiate differently at the end of the game. 2 points in the last 10 seconds and 2 points in the 2nd quarter count the same. As a competitor I always wanted a consistent whistle the whole game so I would know how to play. If you are going to call it tight all game then I want a tight whistle at the end and if you are going to let us play, let us play the whole way. It was a weak call and as a Pacer fan I can fully admit that. Just don't agree with the 10 seconds left part.
You don't want the game decided on a weak call because a superstar is hunting for it. I feel the same about that if it's Mitchell or Haliburton. Obviously, guys like Haliburton and Mitchell are going to get calls that other players don't, and that's unfortunate. It doesn't follow that they were calling the game tight.
Giving superstars a playoff game on a soft call when they're foul hunting with seconds left isn't supposed to happen anymore.

BigDan245 wrote:


Pacers_Freak wrote:jbk1234 wrote:Pacers_Freak wrote:
I agree that it was a soft call. I've always disagreed with the notion you officiate differently at the end of the game. 2 points in the last 10 seconds and 2 points in the 2nd quarter count the same. As a competitor I always wanted a consistent whistle the whole game so I would know how to play. If you are going to call it tight all game then I want a tight whistle at the end and if you are going to let us play, let us play the whole way. It was a weak call and as a Pacer fan I can fully admit that. Just don't agree with the 10 seconds left part.
You don't want the game decided on a weak call because a superstar is hunting for it. I feel the same about that if it's Mitchell or Haliburton. Obviously, guys like Haliburton and Mitchell are going to get calls that other players don't, and that's unfortunate. It doesn't follow that they were calling the game tight.
Giving superstars a playoff game on a soft call when they're foul hunting with seconds left isn't supposed to happen anymore.
I'd rather there weren't weak calls period for anyone. Does 2 points in the 2nd quarter not count the same? Let's say in game 3 Siakim gets 3 weak trips to the line in the 1st half. If Mitchell gets one with 10 seconds left the Pacers would still be +4 in weak call FT attempts. That sways the game more than a late call. I'm not really arguing with your main point in that it shouldn't have been a foul call on Mitchell. I just don't think it should have been a foul in the 2nd quarter or if there are 10 seconds left.

jbk1234 wrote:The Pacers can't come back from the officials gifting the game to Mitchell at the end.
yoadknux wrote:Has anyone noticed that when the buzzer rang, Strus ran to Hali and pushed him, and to avoid unnecessary crap Turner and Nesmith did a sandwiched celebration
jbk1234 wrote:BigDan245 wrote:
Pretty sure Atkinson has stated publicly that organization won't clear him to play if he's only at 60%. Maybe they bend a little now. Maybe Garland yells at little louder now. But, and you're going to want to sit down for this one, Stephan A doesn't know what he's talking about.
Also, if the past is prologue, the Cavs have a history of publicly downplaying the extent of injuries to keep the opponent unsure of what to prepare for. Allen didn't have a bruised rib last year, it was splintered.

Nuntius wrote:jbk1234 wrote:The Pacers can't come back from the officials gifting the game to Mitchell at the end.
But we did come back. Mitchell shot 11 FTs in the 4th quarter. Do you believe that all of them were actually fouls?
The point is, the Pacers never stopped playing. The Cavs stopped after Strus' big 3.
jbk1234 wrote:Nuntius wrote:jbk1234 wrote:The Pacers can't come back from the officials gifting the game to Mitchell at the end.
But we did come back. Mitchell shot 11 FTs in the 4th quarter. Do you believe that all of them were actually fouls?
The point is, the Pacers never stopped playing. The Cavs stopped after Strus' big 3.
There were three calls in the last two minutes. They all went against Mitchell. The Pacers didn't come back from a foul call that put Mitchell on line with under 10 seconds left because no such call was made. You don't let the game get decided by anything less than a clear foul in the final seconds. You can't point to another game in another series where it happened because it hasn't happened. It hasn't happened because it's not supposed to happen.