One ref signaled charge and one signaled block. They conferred and then went to replay to clarify whether he was in the restricted area. Which suggests (not definitively) that the one who called it a block thought Smart was there in time, but was in restricted area, and one who called a charge thougtht he was there in time and outside restricted area.I feel like they said the call on the floor was a block before they went to review? Am I misremembering?
So, they went to check the restricted area (which they announced), found out he was not, and then decided based on the review he was moving (or something) and called it a block---which wasn't what either of them thought or saw live. The NBA pr guy they have as an officiating specialist noted that in last 2 minutes they can review everything, not just the specific thing they initially were looking for. On balance, I do think that's a good thing---if you incur delay in last two minutes focus on getting the call right substantively, not just what they thought initially. I don't think they quite did here.
There's no question on replay he has one foot fully set and outside restricted zone the whole time. What I think one can debate is whether the other foot-which was set when Maxey jumped, but slid a bit towards first---moving constitutes a change of position. While visually Marcus moving his uppper body a bit looks bad, it is not (by the rule) actually determinative---it is about getting to the spot first, which is about the first leg not the body. He would have been more likely to get the call if his upper body was still, though. Especially since both refs appear to have thought live he got there, I wouldn't overturn and think on the merits it's a charge. But I get the counter argument
I am on the side of the spectrum that officiating impact on games is often understatated. That said, for me, last night was about Celtics not executing or playing defense, not the calls ultimately.
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