I watched all 4 games yesterday, and saw 2 games decided and one impacted by biased officiating:
Mavs shoot 19 fts to 2 for the Blazers in the 4th Q, shots inside 15 ft 10-3 in the Blazers' favor. For the game, points in the paint 46-18 Blazers, Mavs +16 fts, 8-pt "win". Blazers shot 9.4 fts below their season avg, Mavs 6.4 more than their avg.
Heatles shoot 15 fts to 2 for Philly in the 4th Q, shots inside 15 ft 10-3 in the Sixers' favor. For the game, points in the paint 42-32 Philly, Heatles +24 fts, 8-pt "win". Philly shot 7.6 fts below their season avg, heatles 11 more than their avg.
Bulls shoot 7 fts to 3 for the Pacers in the 4th Q, including just an and 1 on what should have been a flagrant on Boozer shoving Hansborough in the back from behind on a breakaway dunk (Hansborough didn't flop, smh - still a flagrant). For the game, points in the paint 44-32 Bulls, Bulls +15 fts, 5-pt win. Rose shot 21 fts (13.1 over his season avg), Pacers' entire team 17 (7.8 fts below their season avg, Bulls 7.5 more than their avg).
Only the Bulls-Pacers game wasn't a complete sham, but there was a lot of contact not called on those 2 "blocks" by Noah at the end...
Props to Nate McMillan for having the guts to take on the commish and the fine he will inevitably receive by pointing out the 19-2 disparity - and no props for Doug Collins' joke about not wanting to be fined sending a similar message.