Jazz-Pelicans ends in controversy after no-call
Rudy Gobert made body-to-body contact with Brandon Ingram after chasing the Pelicans forward down the right side of the lane. Ingram’s…
NEW ORLEANS — A possible no-call that goes against the home team in New Orleans. The officials reviewing a call after time expired. Those same officials being escorted out of the playing area showered by thousands of boos.
No, this wasn’t a Saints’ playoff game. This was the scene at the Smoothie King Center at the end of the New Orleans Pelicans‘ 128-126 loss to the Utah Jazz on Monday night.
Just one day after the Saints season ended after officials determined there was no offensive pass interference on the final play of the game in overtime, Pelicans coaches, players and fans were also looking for a whistle on the game’s last play that could have possibly sent a game into overtime.
With Utah up two, the Pelicans forced Bojan Bogdanovic into a missed 3-pointer which led to a chance to tie the game or take the lead. Pelicans forward Brandon Ingram grabbed the rebound and that’s where some of the craziness started.
As soon as the ball touched Ingram’s hands three different Pelicans signaled for a timeout — Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry and guard Lonzo Ball near halfcourt and guard JJ Redick near where Ingram took in the rebound.
None of those three timeout signals were granted. Redick pulled his back as soon as Ingram took a dribble and Gentry and Ball stopped once Ingram started gaining a full head of steam toward the basket.
Ingram drove directly at the Utah center, and two-time reigning Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert, who was at the rim. Gobert leapt straight up and Ingram tried to contort his body around Gobert’s to get the layup. Ingram’s arm wrapped around Gobert, but Gobert’s left arm did make contact with Ingram’s right arm as he released the ball.
The referees signaled the game was over after going to the review to see if there was any time left on the clock after any possible clock malfunction. Once they determined that — because rules prohibit them from retroactively adding a foul in that situation — the game was finished.
Gentry said he wasn’t given an explanation on the court for why there wasn’t a foul call.
“All we did was exactly what we were supposed to do, took the ball, drove it hard at the basket, and then they determined it wasn’t a foul,” Gentry said. “End of game.”
Gentry added that the officials didn’t give any explanation for missing the timeout signals either and also that he can’t remember a late-game occurrence in which he wasn’t granted the timeout in that situation.
Ball said the coaching staff told the players that if they got a stop, they were going to immediately call timeout and that’s what he was doing. Once he saw Ingram going to the goal, he pulled back because “not many people can stop that.”
So what did Ball think of the end of the game?
“It was a foul, nothing more, nothing less,” Ball said. “We should have got two free throws. We didn’t. Ball game.”
Ingram took the high road when asked about the contact at the end of the game.
“I don’t really think it matters what I saw,” Ingram said. “The referee seen something different.”
When asked directly if he was fouled Ingram just said, “I felt like I got hit, but the referee sees differently so that’s the reality of it.”
There was a lengthy review at the end of the game despite most of the Utah bench heading to the locker room but it didn’t have to do with reviewing the foul itself.
Crew chief Kane Fitzgerald told the pool reporter after the game that “On the last play, we saw the drive to the basket by Ingram, and we felt during live play that Rudy played legal defense.”
The sting of the game was particularly harsh for the Pelicans who saw a similar no-call situation play out exactly three weeks ago.
On Dec. 17, the Pelicans should have had a chance to win a game in regulation against the Brooklyn Nets as the Nets committed a shot-clock violation with 2.7 seconds remaining. However, officials at the time determined the ball hit the rim and no violation was called and the Pelicans missed a heave to try and win the game.
Instead, the game went into overtime and the Nets came away with a 108-101 win.