The Heat protested the game because, with 51.9 seconds remaining in overtime, the Hawks' scoring table personnel incorrectly disqualified the Heat's Shaquille O'Neal – asserting that a foul committed by O'Neal was his sixth foul of the game, when in fact it was only his fifth. The error occurred because the Hawks’ Official Scorer mistakenly attributed to O’Neal a foul at 3:24 remaining in the fourth period that was actually called against the Heat’s Udonis Haslem.
Mofo wrote:For those who missed it (what caused Matthew's reply), I made a longer sidetrack to when the Raptors had two points missed against Atlanta in a game last season, where it ended up 97-93, and where was the replay to that.
Matthew wrote:Mofo wrote:For those who missed it (what caused Matthew's reply), I made a longer sidetrack to when the Raptors had two points missed against Atlanta in a game last season, where it ended up 97-93, and where was the replay to that.
Don't blame me for you going way off track in the first post of your very own thread.
BIG GREEN wrote:Even if they replayed that game and the heat won....will it make much of a difference for the worst team in the NBA? It's not like it would determine whether they had home court advantage in the playoffs or something.
Laxation wrote:Isnt it great!! The heat can lose TWICE in one night now!
stackmillz93 wrote:They should be replaying the last 10 seconds of the '98 Finals. Replaying the last 50 seconds of a regular season game between two teams who aren't even contenders seems a bit silly to me.
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