MacNeacail
StNick2261 (Santa Wemby)
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2025
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Way back in 2014, I used to do little write-ups on Facebook for my family so they'd know what to expect for each Spurs playoff game or series. I haven't really done it since, but the first 2 games of this series got me thinking about the refs again. There were so many bad calls.
It's amazing that quite a few of the refs I wrote about back then are still officiating now.
Anyway, I'm trying to get a feel of the new refs, but I haven't paid attention to them until recently. So I went to basketball reference to get some stats (also ChatGPT and also Googled whatever articles I could find). Anyway, here's what I found for tonight's refs.
Relative FGA: How many shots are taken by both teams total (relative to league average)
Relative FGA Range: -3.0 (slow) through +2.9 (fast)
Relative PF: How many fouls are called by both teams total (relative to league average)
Relative PF Range: -1.5 (no calls) through 2.7 (lots of calls)
Home Minus Visitor PF: Do home or visitor teams get foul calls more (relative to league average)
Home Minus Visitor PF Range: -1.9 (favors home) through +1.8 (favors road)
Home Minus Visitor W/L%: Do home or visitor teams win the game more (relative to league average)
Home Minus Visitor W/L% Range: -.320 (road team wins) through +.462 (home team wins)
Refs are listed in order by: Crew Chief / Referee / Umpire (which is basically a hierarchy of who can override who when disagreements happen)
Gm3:
James Williams (#60) 14th season
The Referee with the most techs given in the past 3 years. He is a "high-control" referee (he likes the be the one in charge). "Devin Booker called out referee James Williams by name after losing to OKC." (This year's Gm2)
Overall RTA: +2.0 FGA (faster pace), -1.4 PF (less stopping)
H-V RTA: +0.1 PF (near league average), +.110 W/L% (home winning edge)
Kevin Scott (#24) 13th season
Balanced pacing. Overall a solid ref that allows for a smooth game. Transition-heavy teams do well with him officiating.
Overall RTA: +0.7 FGA (balanced pace), +0.2 PF (less stopping)
H-V RTA: +0.4 PF (neutral/slight road team), +.149 W/L% (home winning edge)
Brian Forte (#45) 19th season
Often calls paint contact and rebounding fouls more tightly (protecting offensive players in traffic should favor aggressive rim attackers). Less tolerant of overly physical defense.
Overall RTA: -1.9 FGA (slow pace), -0.3 PF (slightly less than avg calls)
H-V RTA: +0.1 PF (near league average), -.183 W/L% (road winning edge)
Overall the aggressive team will have the advantage as long as they don't speak up against James Williams.
"The best way to overcome bad refs: a blowout win."
Spurs / Thunder Gm3 Refs:
It pains me to say that I've written about two of these refs last year (and not in a favorable manner).
Scott Foster - Spurs record in the playoffs (as of last year) with Foster as chief ref: 1-7. Yes, this is the same Scott Foster who has 8 pages devoted to him in the FBI investigation into the NBA ref scandal with Tim Donaghey. Foster officiated not only the 2nd worst officiated game of last year (SAS-MEM Gm2) but also the worst officiated game (SAS-MIA Gm4)... PLUS game 7 in the finals. He likes to make calls for the losing team to keep games close.
Bill Kennedy - was on the same ref crew with Foster in last year's horribly called games. He has a habit of calling fouls when a team goes on a run to stop momentum (also to keep games close).
Tom Washington - I don't know much about him other than his record favors the home team more than the league average.
With Ibaka back, I can see him getting away with everything. He will be able to clog the lane and make us a jump shooting team. The Spurs will have to have an all-around good game to win tonight. Still no Tony Brother's tonight, but I fully expect the Spurs tonight to be playing 5 on 8.
(and then the beginning of the next game's post):
Spurs / Thunder Gm4 Refs:
In case anyone is wondering just how much effect the refs have on games... the Thunder set an NBA record for the most free throw attempts in a quarter in Gm3 (22 - The average FTs a teams takes is 20-21 per game). In fact, the Thunder had 31 free throws to Spurs 7 until the last 3 minutes of the game when the refs started calling everything in favor of the spurs to try to even it out (yes, I believe the refs tried to cover up what they were doing after the game was out of hand). To those who say the Thunder were just more aggressive... yes, they were... but they were able to be more aggressive when the refs allow them to. And the Spurs are now 1-8 with Scott Foster as chief ref in recent history.
It pains me to say that I've written about two of these refs last year (and not in a favorable manner).
Scott Foster - Spurs record in the playoffs (as of last year) with Foster as chief ref: 1-7. Yes, this is the same Scott Foster who has 8 pages devoted to him in the FBI investigation into the NBA ref scandal with Tim Donaghey. Foster officiated not only the 2nd worst officiated game of last year (SAS-MEM Gm2) but also the worst officiated game (SAS-MIA Gm4)... PLUS game 7 in the finals. He likes to make calls for the losing team to keep games close.
Bill Kennedy - was on the same ref crew with Foster in last year's horribly called games. He has a habit of calling fouls when a team goes on a run to stop momentum (also to keep games close).
Tom Washington - I don't know much about him other than his record favors the home team more than the league average.
With Ibaka back, I can see him getting away with everything. He will be able to clog the lane and make us a jump shooting team. The Spurs will have to have an all-around good game to win tonight. Still no Tony Brother's tonight, but I fully expect the Spurs tonight to be playing 5 on 8.
(and then the beginning of the next game's post):
Spurs / Thunder Gm4 Refs:
In case anyone is wondering just how much effect the refs have on games... the Thunder set an NBA record for the most free throw attempts in a quarter in Gm3 (22 - The average FTs a teams takes is 20-21 per game). In fact, the Thunder had 31 free throws to Spurs 7 until the last 3 minutes of the game when the refs started calling everything in favor of the spurs to try to even it out (yes, I believe the refs tried to cover up what they were doing after the game was out of hand). To those who say the Thunder were just more aggressive... yes, they were... but they were able to be more aggressive when the refs allow them to. And the Spurs are now 1-8 with Scott Foster as chief ref in recent history.
It's amazing that quite a few of the refs I wrote about back then are still officiating now.
Anyway, I'm trying to get a feel of the new refs, but I haven't paid attention to them until recently. So I went to basketball reference to get some stats (also ChatGPT and also Googled whatever articles I could find). Anyway, here's what I found for tonight's refs.
Relative FGA: How many shots are taken by both teams total (relative to league average)
Relative FGA Range: -3.0 (slow) through +2.9 (fast)
Relative PF: How many fouls are called by both teams total (relative to league average)
Relative PF Range: -1.5 (no calls) through 2.7 (lots of calls)
Home Minus Visitor PF: Do home or visitor teams get foul calls more (relative to league average)
Home Minus Visitor PF Range: -1.9 (favors home) through +1.8 (favors road)
Home Minus Visitor W/L%: Do home or visitor teams win the game more (relative to league average)
Home Minus Visitor W/L% Range: -.320 (road team wins) through +.462 (home team wins)
Refs are listed in order by: Crew Chief / Referee / Umpire (which is basically a hierarchy of who can override who when disagreements happen)
Gm3:
James Williams (#60) 14th season
The Referee with the most techs given in the past 3 years. He is a "high-control" referee (he likes the be the one in charge). "Devin Booker called out referee James Williams by name after losing to OKC." (This year's Gm2)
Overall RTA: +2.0 FGA (faster pace), -1.4 PF (less stopping)
H-V RTA: +0.1 PF (near league average), +.110 W/L% (home winning edge)
Kevin Scott (#24) 13th season
Balanced pacing. Overall a solid ref that allows for a smooth game. Transition-heavy teams do well with him officiating.
Overall RTA: +0.7 FGA (balanced pace), +0.2 PF (less stopping)
H-V RTA: +0.4 PF (neutral/slight road team), +.149 W/L% (home winning edge)
Brian Forte (#45) 19th season
Often calls paint contact and rebounding fouls more tightly (protecting offensive players in traffic should favor aggressive rim attackers). Less tolerant of overly physical defense.
Overall RTA: -1.9 FGA (slow pace), -0.3 PF (slightly less than avg calls)
H-V RTA: +0.1 PF (near league average), -.183 W/L% (road winning edge)
Overall the aggressive team will have the advantage as long as they don't speak up against James Williams.
"The best way to overcome bad refs: a blowout win."