Ghost
Gentleman of the Night
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2011
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You take the ref's out of the equation late by making open shots and not being in a position to where a blown call by an official is going to ultimately decide a close game. Michigan did that, and Syracuse did not. Not matter how you cut it. 3-14 from three versus 8-24, the ref's really didn't have much to do with that stat line. The bottom line is that if we hit the boards, make some shots, and play Syracuse zone defense in the first half and don't go into the half down 11, the team isn't put into a position to where they have to worry about an official blowing calls to decide the game. Our play is just as much at fault as officiating. Blaming the officials is always the easy scapegoat. This team has been schizophrenic offensively all season long.
Unless it's legitimate. We have instant replay now, and when everyone thinks a call is wrong in full speed, and then it's verified when slowed down - it's not a scapegoat, it's just a fact.
I'll use baseball again - when that kid on the White Sox lost his no-hitter a couple years ago, people weren't using the blown call at first as a scapegoat, and you can't say he should have just struck him out, he was out at first by a MILE, and replay confirmed it. It's just a fact - that call was wrong and it had HUGE implications (he lost his no-hitter and likely his one shot at being in the record books since I think his career crapped out) - just like last night. Keep in mind we lost our PG because of that play. That last possession we have Cooney driving because of that play - the implications and how that game played out were because the ref missed an easy call.
It sucks, it happens, but just saying it's scapegoating isn't legit.