If true, it's such a disgrace. I remember vehemently rooting for the Kings and thinking they got a fair share of bad calls during the 2002 western conference finals... this may explain why at least for game 6.


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ORL wrote:FYI, refs for game 6 of Lakers-Kings in 2002 were #27 Dick Bavetta, #16 Ted Bernhardt, #26 Bob Delaney. Would anyone be surprised if Bavetta and Delaney were not NBA's "company men"?
The two players that were ejected were Divac and Pollard, i.e. the two guys primarily on Shaq, who had 41 and 17 that game.
http://www.nba.com/games/20020531/SACLAL/boxscore.html
Jeff Van Gundy ultimately backed off comments that a referee told him officials had targeted Yao Ming in the Houston Rockets' 2005 first-round playoff series against the Dallas Mavericks. Maybe Van Gundy was right after all.
A letter sent to the sentencing court on behalf of convicted former referee Tim Donaghy outlines just such a plan. Donaghy's legal team is trying to demonstrate his cooperation with a federal government investigation before he is sentenced on July 14 on felony charges for taking cash payoffs from gamblers and betting on games himself.
"Team 3 lost the first two games in the series and Team 3's owner complained to NBA officials," the letter says. "Team 3's owner alleged that referees were letting a Team 4 player get away with illegal screens. NBA Executive Y told Referee Supervisor Z that the referees for that game were to enforce the screening rules strictly against that Team 4 player. Referee Supervisor Z informed the referees about his instructions. As an alternate referee for that game, Tim also received these instructions."
Mavs owner Mark Cuban complained after his team lost the first two games of the series, and Dallas went on to beat Houston in seven games. Van Gundy said that a working referee had told him about the league's plan. Donaghy's letter claims that Supervisor Z contacted the coach. Van Gundy was fined $100,000.
Looking at box scores from the series, however, the only game in which Yao fouled out was Game 1. He did average 4.4 fouls per game in the series.
The letter also details an incident in the 2002 playoffs in which Donaghy alleges that two referees, who were known as NBA "company men," wanted to extend a series to seven games. "Team 5" could have wrapped up the series in Game 6 but lost two players to ejection, lost that game and ultimately the series.
Donaghy also alleges that team executives conspired with the league to prevent star players from being called for too many fouls or being ejected. He claimed that league officials told referees that doing so would "hurt ticket sales and television ratings."
According to the letter, when an official did eject a star player in the first quarter of a game in 2000, he was privately reprimanded.
In addition to game-altering allegations, Donaghy's letter claims that many officials carry on "relationships" with team executives, coaches and players that violate their NBA contracts.
"Tim described one referee's use of a team's practice facility to exercise and another's frequent tennis matches with a team's coach," the letter states.
"I just think everybody needs to stop talking about it," Howard said. "There's more to life than free throws."
flyingvee wrote:LOL at Phil Jacksons response when they asked him about the allegations. He immediatley deflected it to question a bad call against the Lakers in game 5 of that same series. What a memory. Or better yet what a rehearsed answer. Would be expect anything else from a coach that has benefited more from NBA favoritism than Jackson? First as coach to Jordan and then Shaq/Kobe? He'd be the LAST guy to even hint at any wrong-doing.
flyingvee wrote:Here is that bit from Ralph Nader that I remember reading back after that 2002 series.
http://espn.go.com/nba/playoffs2002/s/2002/0605/1390908.html
flyingvee wrote:How much credibility do you need than to just go to the video tape? Look at game 6 of that series, issues subpoenas to the refs involved and ask them why were certain calls made or not made? Ask why Kobe wasn't whistled for elbowing Bibby in the face. Of course, isolate them from any contact from Stern and his mob as Stern would make sure they did not talk.
"I just think everybody needs to stop talking about it," Howard said. "There's more to life than free throws."