NEW YORK ā The Indiana Pacers have, as coach Rick Carlisle said they would, sent 78 plays they believe were officiated incorrectly from the first two games of their series against the New York Knicks to the NBA office for review, a person with knowledge of the action said Thursday.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because neither the Pacers nor the league had publicly confirmed the plays were actually sent.
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āIām always talking to our guys about not making it about the officials,ā Carlisle said after Game 2 on Wednesday, a 130-121 win for New York that gave the Knicks a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinal series. āWe deserve a fair shot. Thereās not a consistent balance and thatās disappointing. Give New York credit for the physicality that theyāre playing with. But their physicality is rewarded and ours is penalized, time after time.ā
Carlisle said the Pacers identified 29 plays from Game 1 that they had issue with, but that he decided against sending those clips to the league office because he believed āweād get a more balanced whistleā in Game 2.
āIt didnāt feel that way,ā Carlisle said.
Itās not uncommon for teams to send plays to the league for review or explanation, even though the outcome of games wonāt change. Carlisle said heās aware that what the Pacers sent to the NBA will be sent to the Knicks as well.
Among the issues Carlisle discussed openly after Game 2: what he said was an uncalled shove by New Yorkās Josh Hart into the back of Indiana star Tyrese Haliburton, who has been playing through a back injury, along with a double-dribble call against Knicks center Isaiah Hartenstein with 1:19 left that was changed to an inadvertent whistle. New York kept possession on that play and held the ball for 38 more seconds, thanks in part to two offensive rebounds. Jalen Brunson scored with 41.9 seconds left to push New Yorkās lead to eight, and Carlisle was ejected moments later for arguing.
On the Haliburton play, Carlisle said: āItās all over Twitter right now because a few people have showed it to me and (referee) JB DeRosa is looking right at it. You can see he has vision of the play and he shoves Tyrese into the corner and there is no whistle. Right in the back. That was shocking and there were many others.ā
All that came after officiating was a major topic after Game 1 as well. Officials acknowledged an incorrectly called kicked ball violation late in Game 1 ā referees erroneously called it against the Pacers, who by rule couldnāt challenge the play in what was a tie game, and New York took the lead for good 12 seconds later ā but the Pacers believed there were plenty other instances of wrong whistles.
After Game 2, Haliburton said the Pacers needed to blame themselves, not the officials.
āAt the end of the day we got outplayed. We were right there in the game,ā Haliburton said. āBut I like consistency, yeah. But letās not pretend, like, thatās the only reason we lost. We just didnāt play good enough. But at the end of the day itās 2-0.ā
The league is based in New York, which is also the countryās largest media market, according to Nielsen. Among current NBA cities, Indianapolis plays in the leagueās 23rd-largest market. The series shifts there for Game 3 on Friday.
āSmall-market deserve an equal shot,ā Carlisle said after Game 2. āThey deserve a fair shot, no matter where theyāre playing.ā
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AP Basketball Writer Tim Reynolds contributed to this report.
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