L2M Report: Pair of mistakes hurt OKC Thunder in Game 3 loss to Mavericks

L2M Report: Pair of mistakes hurt OKC Thunder in Game 3 loss to Mavericks.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s Game 3 loss to the Dallas Mavericks received extra salt in the wound with the Last Two Minutes Report.

The L2M Report indicated a pair of officiating mistakes hurt the Thunder. The first included Luka Doncic getting away with a turnover: He palmed the basketball with a 102-99 lead with 1:50 left.

The non-call was inconsequential because Doncic missed a stepback jumper. The second mistake was more costly though.

A controversial jump ball created outrage among Thunder fans. With OKC trailing, 102-99, with 1:32 left, the referees called for a jump ball between Lu Dort and Doncic.

The L2M report admitted it should’ve been a non-call. Both players had their hands on the loose ball and the play shouldn’t have been stopped for a held ball.

Doncic won the jump ball and gained Dallas an extra possession. It was a costly mistake considering the Thunder lost a one-possession game. The Thunder could’ve created a quality look to tie the game at 101 with roughly a minute left.

The admission of the errors is a nice sign of accountability, but the damage is done. While the Thunder didn’t lose because of the officials, getting an extra possession in a three-point game could’ve played a massive role in how Game 3 turned out.

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L2M Report backs up controversial offensive goaltending ruling in Thunder’s 141-139 loss to Warriors

The L2M report agreed with the overturn call that turned an offensive goaltend violation to a Steph Curry game-winner.

Many in OKC likely viewed Saturday’s Last Two Minute report as a chance to see if the Oklahoma City Thunder were wronged in their 141-139 loss to the Golden State Warriors.

If fans hoped for a justification for their outcry over an offensive goaltending call being overturned, resulting in a game-winning floater by Steph Curry with 0.2 seconds left, they were disappointed. The L2M report didn’t provide that.

In the report, the league said the officials correctly overturned their initial ruling. It noted Green’s contact with the rim didn’t affect Curry’s shot.

“After communicating with the Replay Center, the ruling on the floor of offensive basket interference is overturned. There is clear and conclusive evidence that Green (GSW) does not touch the ball and — although Green makes contact with the rim — contacting the rim, standing alone, does not violate the rule. In order for contact with the rim to constitute offensive basket interference when the ball is not in the net, it must (a) occur while the ball is sitting or rolling on the rim and using the rim as its lower base, (b) cause the ball to take an unnatural bounce, or (c) move the rim off-center. None of those conditions were satisfied on this play, so there was no basket interference.”

In a pool report following the game, head referee Mitchell Ervin provided further clarity for the game-deciding call.

“It was clear and conclusive evidence that Draymond does not touch the ball,” Ervin said. “Although Draymond does touch the rim, he does not touch the ball, nor does him touching the rim cause the ball to take an unnatural bounce therefore a basketball violation does not occur on the play.”

Following the pivotal ruling, fans took to social media to express their discontent with the call and confusion about what should be a rather simple rule.

Instead, most fans learned on Friday that a seemingly black-or-white call like offensive goaltending actually includes nuance and specific exceptions that Green met on that final play.

In the L2M report, the only miscue actually benefited OKC. At 1:12, Josh Giddey got away with a turnover due to palming the basketball.

Despite the sour ending, the Thunder had arguably their most impressive showing of the young season. Without Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, OKC scored a highly efficient 139 points in regulation due to their young core.

The Thunder took the four-time champion Warriors to the wire and earned new levels of respect from their accomplished peers.

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L2M Report: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander late-game charge in close Pelicans loss was incorrect call

The call that essentially ended the game for the Thunder was wrong.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s 105-101 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans came with some controversy.

With 11 seconds to go, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had a chance to tie or take the lead in a two-point game. As Gilgeous-Alexander began to drive to the basket, Pelicans defender Herb Jones absorbed contact and fell to the ground.

The call on the floor took some time to make. One referee signaled a blocking foul while another signaled a charge. After discussing it, Gilgeous-Alexander was called for a charge. With 2.3 seconds left, the call essentially sealed the win for the Pelicans.

Well, the NBA’s last two-minute report declared the call was wrong and  Jones should’ve been called for a blocking foul, which would’ve rewarded Gilgeous-Alexander two free throws.

“Jones (NOP) moves laterally into Gilgeous-Alexander’s (OKC) path, and does not establish a legal guarding position in his path prior to contact.”

On the report, the Thunder also benefited from three incorrect non-calls: a Gilgeous-Alexander defensive three seconds at the 1:14 mark, a Gilgeous-Alexander personal foul on Dyson Daniels at the 0:34 mark and a Lu Dort loose ball foul on Daniels at the 0:09 mark.

Nonetheless, while it’s unfortunate the call was wrong, there’s really no point in crying over spilled milk. The damage is done and all the Thunder can do is get ready for their game against the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday.

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