Courtside

Yesterday, the Pelicans lost to the Nuggets by a basket after Zion Williamson failed to dunk the ball following a successful contest by Nikola Joki膰 with 2.2 ticks left in the match. In the aftermath, he 鈥 and plenty of other quarters, head coach Stan Van Gundy included 鈥 noted that his attempt was foiled, but not after contact to the hand and head. To be sure, their contention was valid; replays showed the coverage wasn鈥檛 exactly clean, and the National Basketball Association鈥檚 Last Two Minute Report, issued whenever scores are within five points of each other in the crunch, will no doubt validate the eye test.

Not that the admission of the mistakes, even if by Joki膰, will change the outcome; on the contrary, all it does for the Pelicans, and particularly for Williamson, is rub salt on open wounds. If nothing else, it underscores his point that 鈥淚鈥檝e got to earn my respect. I鈥檓 only in Year 2. I鈥檝e got to get a couple more years under my belt, and, hopefully, things change with that.鈥 As if the definition of a foul changes with time and experience. And never mind that he already has tons of the 鈥渞espect鈥 he is alluding to; only three other players in the entire league shoot more free throws than he does every outing.

Which is not to say the game arbiters play favorites, or that they swallow their whistles at times. Action in the NBA comes so quickly and so impactfully that it鈥檚 downright irrational to expect them to get things right a hundred percent of the time. If anything, contact occurs with every play, and the mandate for the men in gray is not just to keep the proceedings in check; it鈥檚 to keep the proceedings moving along at a reasonable pace. Imagine if they called every infraction, real or perceived.

True, a foul is a foul, and it鈥檚 precisely what the Last Two Minute Report will show. Then again, there鈥檚 a reason officials are loath to decide outcomes by using their whistles; fans come to see the stars perform under pressure, not take anticlimactic charities. Of course, the counterargument is that the officials decide outcomes, anyway, by not using their whistles. As with just about anything else, however, the truth lies somewhere in between. Unless a foul is so obvious as to elicit vehement reactions if it鈥檚 not called, the preference is to let the action continue. It鈥檚 what happened yesterday, and it鈥檚 what will keep happening. Because people decide. And people are people.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since 大象传媒 introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.