[外電] Wolves land on bad side of the line in controversy
http://www.startribune.com/511/story/1032861.html
After beating the Boston Celtics in overtime Sunday, the Timberwolves went on
to suffer an emotional 124-117 loss in double overtime at the TD Banknorth
Garden.
Come again?
To their cores, the Wolves believe that they earned a victory in 53 minutes
that, to their dismay, slipped away in 58. The problem? Referee Violet
Palmer's overturned or change-of-heart foul call with 15.1 seconds left in
the first overtime that sent Wolves guard Ricky Davis to the line for three
-- oops! -- two free throws and his team down 105-102.
Instead of being able to tie at that moment, Minnesota needed a last-ditch
three-pointer from Kevin Garnett at 4.5 seconds just to make it 107-107 and
force another five minutes.
And in that overtime, Boston outscored the Wolves 11-2 over the last 2:14.
The Celtics had a 10-1 edge in foul shots in the second OT, part of a 46-23
edge overall, and outscored their guests by 17 on the freebies.
That was secondary, though, to the anger Wolves coach Randy Wittman and
several players expressed over the ruling on Davis. And like so many of the
great scandals in U.S. history, it wasn't so much the original act as it was
the cover-up.
Consider this one Violetgate.
"It was a guess," Wittman said, borderline irate. "Violet had it as a three,
and then I don't know what happened. So the other two [refs] had to have
guessed. Because, obviously, everybody's watched it and it's not even close.
And to guess, that's not right. That cost us a game."
Video replays -- which cannot be used by NBA refs except at the end of
quarters, for clock issues -- showed that Davis leaped across the three-point
line as Boston's Ryan Gomes fouled him. He launched the ball before he
landed. And Palmer did raise one arm to signal a three-point shot.
The play took place near the Celtics bench, and the officials stepped farther
onto the court for a huddle. That's when they ruled it a two-point shot. Per
NBA policy, Palmer, Mike Callahan and David Guthrie declined to be
interviewed by a pool reporter, calling it a "judgment call."
The huddle and reversal seemed to argue otherwise, but a league spokesman --
contacted by the Celtics' media relations department -- backed that decision
not to explain.
That didn't stop the Wolves (26-33) -- who have dropped 10 of their past 11
road games -- from giving their version.
"I guess Violet changed the call," Davis said as he dressed.
Garnett interrupted from a few feet away: "Doc Rivers changed the call."
Said Davis, who led all scorers with a season-high 35 points: "Yeah, Doc
Rivers changed the call, actually. He yelled that I crossed over and hit the
line. She believed him."
Rivers, coach of the Celtics, said: "I just voiced my opinion. Since then,
I've heard that he was definitely behind. So if I did [convince them], good."
Wittman was even more irritated by the explanation he got. "Then they're
going to give me the excuse that 'There were so many feet involved in the
play.' Are you kidding me? 'That they couldn't tell whose feet was whose.'
Well, that's their job. Just like it's our job to coach. Don't come to me and
say ... 'There were too many feet?!' That's the case every play.
"Don't make up a story. Tell me, y'know what, we just don't know. Don't tell
me there's 'too many feet' out there."
The outcome spoiled what had been a Hollywood return to the lineup for Troy
Hudson, who made his first start since late in 2004-05. Hudson, who hadn't
been used at all in 15 of the club's 18 previous games, scored 26 points with
eight assists in 46 minutes. He brought needed flow to an offense that shot
50 percent and had 32 assists.
But the Wolves got manhandled on the boards 57-27, leading to Boston's 23-4
edge in second-chance scoring. Their bench got outscored 41-11 and chipped in
only two points after halftime.
But it was Davis' two points, on what should have been three, that rattled
the Wolves the most.
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