I really thought it said 0.00 on the clock so I left. Still pissed about that one. time to break my TV
Yao was fouled, idiot. Clock stops when there's a foul, if anything, more time should be put BACK on the clock.
ummm do you know the rules of basketball? they blew the whistle when Roy hit him .... thus the clock stopped before it went it .... am I wrong here guys? EDIT - nvm,...i see you corrected yourself...it happens to all of us sometimes appreciate you trying to find reasons why we should have lost though haha
Not only that, there was a time down the stretch (final minute) when the TNT announcers noted the clock wasn't moving whent he Blazers had the ball. And in another thread, someone has snapshot of Roy's shot showing that he caught the ball and turned and the clock still read .8 But it counts as a W . . . just win baby, win
Clock stops on the whistle. Whether it's a foul, a violation, whatever. Whenever the whistle blows, the time keeper stops the clock. It's not Rocket scince. BNM
Hollinger wrote this morning that he reviewed the shot and said it took 1.6 seconds, but later updated it. It now reads: And I'm sure this happens a bit every game. There's bound to be lag in the timing.
I think this is tough to explain . . . but we got knowledgeble posters here. Look at the photo in the thread and tell me if shows we got the benefit of home court clock. Post #17 http://www.basketballforum.com/nba-...-76ers-magic-rockets-blazers.html#post5745641
Thanks for the info . . . good stuff. Hard to argue with a frame by frame break down by the league office. If tehy were wrong, the past has shown they would admit it.
Isn't the clock wired with the refs' whistle somehow? So ya, it stopped when the ref called the foul...