[i]Personally I think this is a pretty big exaggeration. How many times have you seen a play and thought THAT WAS A FOUL? Or thought THAT WAS GOALTENDING? Or thought THAT WAS CLEAN? Only to watch the slow-motion replay and then watch it from a different angle, and find out you were wrong? I know this happens to myself many times, and happens to announcers all the time too.
Plus I've gone to many games, and hear people complaining about calls that I thought the ref got right. The guy sitting behind me yells THAT WAS A FOUL and I'm thinking to myself it looked clean to me.
I would say most fans and commentators get calls wrong a lot more often than than the refs do.
The game moves 100 miles per hour. Plus it might be hard to see a 6'9" 270 pound player travel when there are 9 other giants surrounding him too, all moving in different directions and speeds.
I remember reffing a junior high game by myself last year. That game moved very slow, no speed or athleticism to speak of, and I was easily head and shoulders taller than every kid out there. And that was extremely hard to ref, and I know I missed a ton of calls. It's easier to ref a game with replays, slow-motion, and multiple angles, from a TV cameras on perches that can zoom in, then it is to be in the trenches in real time with only your own 2 eyes.
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It is exaggerated....To a point. I'll give you the subjectivity point in some of your examples. It's a very fast game. You're right about that. But what I'm talking about isn't subjective.
How come the same officials see Kendrick Perkins set an illegal screen every single time he sets one...Yet call Dwight Howard about one in five times he does the same thing...But the same exact official can't see Steve Nash or Dwyane Wade palm the ball virtually every single time he touches the ball? They're all moving at the same speed in pretty much the same location when the two violations happen. Why is Paul Pierce the only player in the NBA who can upfake, have his opponent go straight up, barrel forward into him, and not get called for an offensive foul?
There's nothing subjective about any of those situations, bdm860. Nothing. With the exception of the messiah's traveling....(Which is so obvious that a grade school referee officiating with flash cards as his guide, can see it). None of these scenarios are in crowds or moving at any marked speed. What these scenarios have in common is that the same rules are applied differently based on the person wearing the uniform and not the rule itself.
When a 6'9" 270lb player can take one dribble past halfcourt, take 3 giant steps weaving between defenders before dunking....And the only three people in the arena who can't see that he traveled are the three people, three of the best officials in the world....Who are trained specifically to see it...Well, I could give a rat's behind how fast he's moving. I can see the messiah take 3 steps without a dribble if you ran it in quadruple speed. I can watch the largest basketball player in the NBA shuffle his feet....As can Jeff Van Gundy from a commentators table 75-80 feet away...But the three officials....The most talented officials trained specifically to see the violation can't see Shaq shuffle his feet twice standing right in front of him...(Apparently like the messiah, he's moving 100mph, too?)
Those aren't exaggerations, bdm860. They happen in some form practically every game.
The reason I, and many people question the credibility of the officiating is precicely how often these officials are right about calls when a superstar isn't a participant in a given play.