Stern issues a replay for final minute of Heat/Hawks game...

Smokedawg

Eagles Fan
Heat, Hawks to replay final minute of Dec. 19 game later this year

ATLANTA -- The Atlanta Hawks and Miami Heat must replay the final 51.9 seconds of their game last month because the NBA said the official scorer ruled incorrectly that Shaquille O'Neal fouled out.

This will be the first time since 1982 the league has sent teams back on the court for a replay.

The Hawks won 117-111 at home in overtime Dec. 19. The NBA said Friday the replay will be held before the teams' next scheduled game -- March 8 in Atlanta. Play will start from the time after O'Neal's disputed sixth foul.

The Hawks also were fined $50,000, with commissioner David Stern ruling the team was "grossly negligent" in failing to address the mistake.


The protest is the first granted by the NBA since December 1982, when then-NBA commissioner Larry O'Brien upheld a request for a replay by the San Antonio Spurs after their 137-132 double-overtime loss to the Los Angeles Lakers the previous month.


The Spurs and Lakers finished the game in April 1983, with San Antonio winning 117-114.
 
that's just nuts. anybody know what the score was at that point in the game? I'm sure no wagers will be changed because of it, but still very interesting.
 
anything to keep Pat Riley's career record from being completely dumped in the toilet by his present bunch of bums, huh? lmao
 
Do Over For The Hawks Heat

Heat, Hawks to replay final minute of Dec. 19 game later this year

Associated Press


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<!-- end story header --><!-- begin left column --> <!-- begin page tools --> Updated: January 11, 2008, 6:00 PM ET
<!-- end page tools --><!-- begin story body --> <!-- template inline -->ATLANTA -- The Atlanta Hawks and Miami Heat must replay the final 51.9 seconds of their game last month because the NBA said the official scorer ruled incorrectly that Shaquille O'Neal fouled out. This will be the first time since 1982 the league has sent teams back on the court for a replay.
Protested Games Upheld

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Instances in NBA history when the protest of a game has been granted:
Matchup: Heat at Hawks
Date: Dec. 19, 2007
Scenario: The Heat protested because, with 51.9 seconds remaining in OT, the Hawks' scoring table personnel incorrectly disqualified Miami's Shaquille O'Neal, asserting that a foul committed by O'Neal was his sixth of the game (it was only his fifth). Misstep: The Hawks' official scorer mistakenly attributed to O'Neal a foul at 3:24 remaining in the fourth quarter that was actually called against the Heat's Udonis Haslem.
Ruling: The protest will result is the ending of the game being replayed. Matchup: Lakers at Spurs
Date: Nov. 30, 1982
Scenario: The Spurs claimed misapplication of the lane violation rule with 3 seconds left.
Ruling: Protest was upheld on grounds that the error clearly affected the outcome of the game. Matchup: Nets at 76ers
Date: Nov. 8, 1978
Scenario: Nets claimed misapplication of technical foul rule in second quarter resulting in four unwarranted free throws and ejection of their head coach.
Ruling: Protest upheld on grounds that the error clearly affected the outcome of the game. Matchup: Celtics at Lakers
Date: Dec. 8, 1954
Scenario: The Celtics claimed that the final two free throws by Vern Mikkelsen were not valid because they came on a foul committed after the game ended.
Ruling: Commissioner Maurice Podoloff upheld the referee's ruling.
-- Compiled by ESPN Research

The Hawks won 117-111 at home in overtime Dec. 19. The NBA said Friday the replay will be held before the teams' next scheduled game -- March 8 in Atlanta. Play will start from the time after O'Neal's disputed sixth foul.
The Hawks also were fined $50,000, with commissioner David Stern ruling the team was "grossly negligent" in failing to address the mistake.
The protest is the first granted by the NBA since December 1982, when then-NBA commissioner Larry O'Brien upheld a request for a replay by the San Antonio Spurs after their 137-132 double-overtime loss to the Los Angeles Lakers the previous month.
The Spurs and Lakers finished the game in April 1983, with San Antonio winning 117-114.
The Hawks were leading 112-111 in overtime when O'Neal was called for a foul. The scoring table personnel, who are provided by the home team, ruled it was the Miami center's sixth foul, when actually it was only his fifth.
According to the league, the mistake stemmed from a foul with 3:24 remaining in the fourth quarter that was called on Udonis Haslem but was mistakenly credited to O'Neal at the scoring table.
Stern ruled the Hawks "failed to follow league-mandated scoring procedures and failed to respond effectively when the members of the statisticians' crew noticed the mistake," the NBA said in a statement.
The NBA requires the official scorer to coordinate foul calls with the stat crew during every timeout. That apparently didn't happen in this case, resulting in the mistake going unnoticed until after the game, when the Hawks put out revised boxes showing O'Neal with six fouls.
This isn't the first statistical problem to occur in Atlanta. On Nov. 24, 2006, the official scorer failed to credit Toronto's T.J. Ford with a basket that would have given the Raptors a late tie and an opportunity to change the outcome of a 97-93 loss.
"Because of this conduct by Atlanta's personnel, Miami suffered a clear competitive disadvantage, as O'Neal -- the Heat's second-leading scorer and rebounder that night -- was removed from a one-point game with only 51.9 seconds remaining," the NBA statement said.
Al Horford hit two free throws after O'Neal's foul to give the Hawks a 114-111 lead. Anthony Johnson added a running jumper with 14 seconds left to put the game away.
Now, they'll have to do it over again.
In the meantime, the standings of each team will be reversed (one less win for the Hawks, one less loss for the Heat), and all statistics from the game will be removed until the game is officially completed.
 
what happened last year against the raptors and ford's basket?

how can the official scorer fail to credit a made basket that would have tied the game? da fuk?
 
They're just playing it the night before their next game, this is complete horse shit. They aren't counting Horford's 2 FTs, so it should be Horford at the line for 2 up by 1. It's just begging for Horford to split the pair, then for Wade to take over. It will be funny when Riley doesn't even play Shaq in the final minute because of his foul shooting. This cannot possibly be the biggest mistake in the last 25 year ... the last time portions of a game were replayed. It's unbelievable.
 
They're just playing it the night before their next game, this is complete horse shit. They aren't counting Horford's 2 FTs, so it should be Horford at the line for 2 up by 1. It's just begging for Horford to split the pair, then for Wade to take over. It will be funny when Riley doesn't even play Shaq in the final minute because of his foul shooting. This cannot possibly be the biggest mistake in the last 25 year ... the last time portions of a game were replayed. It's unbelievable.


Just to clarify and I know what you meant, but in case somebody else is confused they are playing it the same night as the other game.
 
Just to clarify and I know what you meant, but in case somebody else is confused they are playing it the same night as the other game.


Yep, thats what I meant. I hope Donaghy details all the games he rigged so we can go back and replay the last few years, if this is the precedent, I think all of the teams that were negatively effected by him would have a bigger gripe than Heat fans who wanted Shaq to play the last few seconds of this Hawks game. I'm sure the Suns would like to replay a couple games of that Spurs series. This is ridiculously unnecessary. I have a feeling if the Heat were the team to win this replay would not be happening.
 
If we lose this game and then miss the playoffs by 1.. that would be an ultimate moose.
 
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