Perhaps as a result, coaches have been all over officials this season, on the court and in the media. Often they have suggested bias against certain players or teams. While some of this is standard, there's undoubtedly been an extra edge this season.
In 2007-08, head coaches and assistants were hit with 172 technical fouls. This year the number was already 170 at the start of last week and now has already soared past last season's total. The Hawks' Mike Woodson was ejected Saturday at The Q, for example. He was the third coach ejected this week with those technicals not yet computed in the season's number.
The league has tried to keep control by handing out fines for coaches' public complaints, hitting the Celtics' Doc Rivers with a second fine last week. Cavs coach Mike Brown got a $25,000 fine earlier this season for hinting at a bias in the officiating of Joey Crawford. Recently, Bobcats coach Larry Brown said he felt the league's officials were biased against his team and it was holding them back.
Also this week, the league took the unusual step of fining official Bill Kennedy for his behavior in ejecting Rivers from a game in Chicago when Rivers said Kennedy goaded him. The public announcement of the fine was also interesting.
All of it has fed speculation that not only will there be some new policies installed for next season but that some officials, even high profile ones, will retire or be asked to leave. Don't think the coaches don't know it and they are getting rather liberal because of it.
Doc Rivers and other NBA coaches are a little more confrontational with officials such as Dick Bavetta this season. There are signs that the league may be preparing to address some long-standing concerns with some of its referees.
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