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Riley and the Heat hope to reverse course in South Florida

DALLAS, Texas (Reuters) - After two double-digit losses to open the NBA Finals, Miami Heat coach Pat Riley has a simple game plan for Game Three in Florida on Tuesday.

"Obviously, we'll have to play the game a lot better than we played it here in Dallas," a frustrated Riley said after his team's 99-85 defeat by the Dallas Mavericks on Sunday night.

The Mavericks' triumph in Game Two could have been a lot worse. Dallas was cruising with a 27-point advantage in the third quarter before Miami made the score respectable.

"Definitely, whatever adjustments we make over the next couple of days are going to have to work," said Riley. "So we're going home. There's no guarantee that that's going to make a difference."

Unless the Heat find a way to get center Shaquille O'Neal more involved in the game, there appears to be little chance it can rally and make this a competitive series.

The five-point effort by the 14-times All-Star was his lowest in 190 career playoff games. Perhaps more alarming to the Heat is that he only took five shots.

Dallas has two, sometimes three defenders harassing O'Neal whether he has the ball or not. O'Neal has been kicking the ball out to the perimeter but that is not how Miami plays.

Riley vowed to get O'Neal the ball more after the series opening 90-80 loss in which the NBA's best center took only 11 shots. Game Two was even worse.

Heat's top two get toughest test

Miami had the two best players on the court against Chicago, New Jersey and Detroit. That is not up for dispute. And nine times out of 10, that simple math wins in basketball more than in the other major sports, no matter how much we try to overcomplicate these things with overanalysis.

Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant won three championships with the Lakers surrounded by a bunch of pedestrian players who vanished the moment Shaq and Kobe broke up. That's why all the wailing and booing of Heat fans about Antoine Walker this season was so silly and overdone. The Two Best Pieces are usually enough in the salary-cap age, no matter the irrelevant teammates. Broken and limping Miami was two minutes from here last season with Eddie and Damon Jones, for the love of Michael Jordan.

But now, as the Miami Heat prepares to play Dallas for the NBA championship beginning Thursday, things get more complicated, more muddied, more interesting.

Let's say, hypothetically, that you had to win a championship in the next seven games. And let's say you had your pick of any two players on the Dallas or Miami rosters. Which two would you take first? There are plenty of NBA general managers who would take the Mavs' Dirk Nowitzki over either Dwyane Wade or Shaquille O'Neal.

O'Neal has to be the guy you pick first, always. He changes everything, always. There's a reason, no matter his teammates, that he always gets to at least the second round of the playoffs.

Let that marinate for a second. Tracy McGrady has never been out of the first round and Kevin Garnett has only gotten beyond it once in a decade. Vince Carter and LeBron James haven't been past the second round. Shaq-less Kobe hasn't gotten beyond the first round. It's hard, obviously. And this is the third different franchise Shaq has taken all the way to The Finals. You think that's a coincidence?

Wade, exceptional as he is, understands and appreciates that. It's why, on ESPN the other day, he called O'Neal everything from his marriage counselor to his father figure to his best friend. And it's why he says now, ``I don't want to be LeBron James. I don't want to be Kobe Bryant. I want to be right where I am now, next to Shaq.''

Wade knows that Gilbert Arenas and Paul Pierce and McGrady and James do a lot of the same things he does. And they, too, might get to be Wade -- top-selling jersey in the NBA, one of People magazine's Most Beautiful, covers of magazines and video games -- if they had the luxury of playing next to Shaq. It isn't coincidence that Shaq's every sidekick promptly gets elevated to The Next Big Thing. There isn't anyone else in the league who does that, and it's why Wade is always so publicly and profoundly grateful. He understands.

Those easy layups previously invisible Jason Williams got against Detroit with Wade diminished by the flu?

It's because the world's best defender, Ben Wallace, kept getting caught under Shaq's armpits in a way that made Wallace's Afro look like Shaq needed to start grooming under there. It's why Udonis Haslem shoots such a high percentage and is always wide open for 10-footers. The opponent has to keep Shaq from getting to the rim for an offensive rebound or a lob or the highest-percentage shot in the sport. And keeping Shaq from the rim is only the most difficult assignment in the sport. Wade couldn't and wouldn't have shot 70 percent in the first five Detroit games without the giant's help.

O'Neal can be very sensitive, though. And Wade, in a genuine way, not a calculated one, has handled him perfectly, always genuflecting. It is why O'Neal, in talking about sidekicks Penny Hardaway and Kobe and Wade, produced perhaps the greatest analogy in the history of Shaq-ese when he said, ``The difference between those three is The Godfather trilogy. One is Fredo, who was never ready for me to hand it over to him. One is Sonny, who will do whatever it takes to be the man. And one is Michael. The Godfather hands it over to Michael. So I have no problem handing it over to Dwyane.''

Of course, Kobe wasn't corrupted at first, either. And Michael Corleone, the mature one, got plenty polluted by power and ego later. So it will be interesting to watch the Wade-Shaq relationship over the next few years, especially if you've read Pat Riley's The Winner Within and believe his warnings on how much intoxicants corrupt once fame and glory have been achieved. But if there is a personality immune to the insanity that comes with fame at these heights, it is Wade. National interviewers still walk away from talking to him with the words, ``God, I hope he doesn't change.''

All that said, you can see why some GMs would prefer the seven-foot Nowitzki to the 6-4 Wade. Nowitzki, it can be argued numerically, was better than any player in the league this season. He not only knocked off defending champ Tim Duncan, but did it in Duncan's building in a Game 7 with Duncan having the best playoff game of his life. And he did it with the league's best perimeter defender, Bruce Bowen, stapled to his forehead.

So Miami is about to meet the single greatest player it has seen in these playoffs, though Nowitzki's greatness ought to be diminished if not stripped entirely by revelations that he sings David Hasselhoff songs to himself at the free-throw line to relax. No one would question David Stern if he suspended Nowitzki for two games for this. It would be just.

We still can't be sure how much Miami's most recent ouster of Detroit had to do with Miami's rising or Detroit's falling. The Pistons were limping and shooting crooked in five games against Cleveland before they got to Miami's doorstep.

Dallas, meanwhile, has had the most impressive run of any team in the postseason. The Mavericks produced the only sweep in the first round, then beat San Antonio and Phoenix at their best. It is staggering to beat the Spurs when they get 20-plus from their three stars, but Nowitzki did that.

Detroit at Miami, 8 p.m. ET

When Miami stepped off the floor a loser in Game 5, top priority was to distance itself from the dreaded P-word: pressure.

Dwyane Wade was so adamant about the issue that he sounded like Jim Mora Sr. being asked about the playoffs.

"Pressure?!"

Wade, who has been so accurate during the series that an 11-for-20 shooting night is considered struggling, instead views Game 6 vs. Detroit as a "golden opportunity." Heat coach Pat Riley uttered something about a second bite at an apple they have three bites to eat, and Shaquille O'Neal simply warned that his team has learned from its mistakes.

Here is a news flash for the Heat. Win Friday, or don't win at all. How's that for pressure?

Miami's opportunity to reach an NBA Finals was destroyed twice last season, and if it's involved in a close game Friday night, all those memories will come flooding back regardless of how many new members are on the team. The Heat are still fueled by Shaq and Wade, who both had to deal with severe disappointment last season, albeit in part because of injuries.

Let's flashback to Game 7 of the '05 East finals. A hampered Wade took a shot to alleviate his ailing ribs at halftime and took another kind of shot, albeit it ill-advised, in the final minute. As for O'Neal, his inability to get the ball where he wanted when he wanted down the stretch ultimately led to the ineffectiveness and hence, revamping of the supporting cast.

Those are facts. Check them out in the history books and remember history tends to repeat itself. Then suck down a tablespoon of reality and understand how difficult a Game 7 in Auburn Hills would be to win.

What are you smiling about, Detroit? The pressure is on you, too. The way the two-time defending conference champs opened this series was disgraceful.

Aren't you the best team in the league? Are you really supposed to find yourselves in this situation time after time?

Congratulations, you've entered a situation where the price for failure is extinction, and the obstacle just happens to be the toughest you've faced since last season's Finals. You lost that one, in case you forgot.

"I think they understand what's at hand," a maligned Flip Saunders said of his team. "You can't be afraid to lose and you can't be afraid to fail. If you're going to be afraid to fail, then you usually play timid and this team has not really done that in these types of situations."

 

Riley Refused to Give Up Wade for O'Neal

If you wondered why the Lakers did not insist on Dwyane Wade being included in the trade that sent Shaquille O'Neal to the Miami Heat two summers ago, Pat Riley said Sunday, "They did."

But Riley held firm.

 

"I thought the deal was fair," said Riley, the Heat president and coach, of the July 2004 trade that sent Lamar Odom, Caron Butler and Brian Grant to the Lakers. "Giving up all three of those guys? Dwyane was the one guy that we didn't want to let go. Not that we had a crystal ball, but we felt there was something there that might be better even than what we'd seen."

Wade, who averaged 16.2 points as a rookie two seasons ago, has since blossomed into an All-Star, averaging 24.1 last season and 27.2 this season.

While the Lakers failed to reach the playoffs a year ago, Wade and O'Neal took the Heat to within one victory of the NBA Finals. This season, the Lakers lost to the Phoenix Suns in the first round of the playoffs and the Heat again reached the Eastern Conference finals. Wade, Shaq & Co. lead the Detroit Pistons, two games to one, going into Game 4 tonight at AmericanAirlines Arena.

O'Neal, hoping to avoid the conflicts that marred his time with Kobe Bryant, met with Wade soon after the trade was completed, Riley said.

"I think the genuine respect level from Shaq to Dwyane, Dwyane to Shaq, right from the beginning, has made those guys a perfect duo," Riley said. "They've got a great feeling for one another and great respect for each other.

"Dwyane was a young, coming player, had not really established himself … and Shaquille just gave him the platform and said, 'Go get it.'

"I think when a player like Dwyane is young and a player like Shaquille knows he has this kind of greatness in him, I think you feel very confident in yourself. I think a lot of his confidence comes from Shaquille."

NBA Draft Lottery Winners and Losers

By Mike Rothman

WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

For the third consecutive year, the team with the worst record in basketball did not win the NBA Draft Lottery. Despite a record of 21-61, the Portland Trail Blazers slipped to the fourth selection for the 2006 draft. This was not a huge surprise, given Portland only had a 25% chance of winning the top pick.

Trail Blazers President Steve Patterson did not seem shaken by his team's drop in the order, hinting to the fact that last year’s fourth selection, Wake Forest point guard Chris Paul, was the overwhelming NBA Rookie of the Year for the Hornets.

"You may find a player with as big an impact at No. 4 or even No. 6 as you may at No. 1," Patterson said.

Meanwhile, the team that did beat the odds and claimed the first overall pick was the Toronto Raptors, despite only an 8.8% chance of winning. General Manager Bryan Colangelo, recently hired away from the Phoenix Suns, was excited about the first pick and said it is a sign of things to come for the downtrodden Raptors.

"For us to have this kind of luck is a symbol of a reversal of fortune going forward," Colangelo said. "We have our work cut out. This will help."

The biggest loser in the lottery had to be a team that wasn't in it: the New York Knicks. After posting their worst record (23-59) in 20 years, the Knicks weren't a factor Tuesday night. Why? Because in the 2005 off season, Isiah Thomas dealt the rights to New York's No. 1 pick in 2006 to the Chicago Bulls for underachieving center Eddy Curry.

The 6’-11” Curry had been diagnosed with heart problems, which is why the Bulls were looking to deal him. In New York, Curry averaged fewer than 26 minutes per game in 2005-06, and less than one block and six rebounds per outing. He also was rarely on the court during crunch time due to his weak defense.

Thus, the lottery's biggest winners had to be the young, up-and-coming Bulls, who ended up with the second overall pick. The Bulls were 41-41 this season and earned the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs, where they pushed the second-seeded Heat to the limit in the opening round. The Bulls already have one of the best young backcourts in the league with Ben Gordon and Kirk Hinrich, and will look to add a front-court impact player in this year’s draft.

"We made the deal, and we're lucky we got in the lottery," said John Paxson, the Bulls' Executive Vice President.

As for the players vying for to be taken No. 1 overall, there does not appear to be a clear-cut choice. Gonzaga forward Adam Morrison, Texas power forward/center LaMarcus Aldridge, LSU forward Tyrus Thomas and Italian power forward Andrea Bargnani are considered the top candidates.

Aldridge, who reaffirmed his stock in the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 with a 26-point, 13-rebound performance against West Virginia, could be the slight favorite for the Raptors. Toronto also likes Bargnani, who is considered a prospect in the mold of Dirk Nowitzki.

The Raptors' Colangelo would not comment on which way the team is leaning.

"Right now we've got a month to go, and we'll see what comes our way and see what we can dig up," Colangelo said. "I think there are about five or six names that could be there. We need a one [point guard] or a five [center]."

This year’s draft may be as much about the players not in it as those who are available. With the NBA's new collective bargaining agreement, this will be the first year that high school seniors won't be eligible for the draft. That eliminated Greg Oden, a 7-foot prep phenom bound for Ohio State this fall, who would have been a lock for the first pick.

Another big man who will not be on the draft board this year is Joakim Noah, the Most Outstanding Player of the 2006 NCAA Final Four. Noah led the Florida Gators to a surprise NCAA title, but decided not to strike while the iron was hot and come back to Gainesville for a run at another championship.

Those are two names most GMs would have rated at the top of their boards this year.

So maybe there is no true big winner of the 2006 lottery. The big winner in the NBA could be the team with that lucky ping-pong ball in 2007.

Detroit vs. Miami, the Sequel: “GOODBYE HEAT”

By Marc BednarczykWagerWeb.com contributing writer Well, well, well, it’s that time of the year again, with the NBA Playoffs for the Eastern Conference Finals. It’s all about matchups, NOT only ON but also OFF the court.  Here are the matchups:  Detroit vs. Miami, the Sequel:  “GOODBYE HEAT” WEATHER: NO Beach vs. South Beach.  Advantage: Miami  MUSIC: Madonna vs. Gloria Estefan. The “Queen of Pop” against the conga. Advantage: Detroit  BEST SONG ABOUT CITY: Kiss’s “Detroit Rock City” vs. Will Smith’s “Miami.” The Fresh Prince has as much “street credibility” as the Backstreet Boys. Besides, Gene Simmons has slept with more women than Wilt Chamberlain. Advantage: Detroit  RAPPER: Eminem vs. Pitbull.  I don’t care for Eminem, but to paraphrase Stuttering John on Pitbull: “WHO are you and what do you do that makes you famous???” Advantage: Detroit  RESTAURANT: Carl’s Chop House vs. Joe’s Stone Crab. Carl’s is good, but Joe’s is the BEST.  Advantage: Miami  WRESTLER: Rob Van Dam vs. “The ROCK.” The Rock is retired from the ring, but my good friend, “Mr. Pay-Per-View”/“The Whole F---en. Show” RVD, is the greatest athlete in wrestling. Don’t believe me? Ask Rasheed Wallace. Advantage: Detroit  COLLEGE FOOTBALL PROGRAMS: U of M. vs. THE “U.” In the last 25 years, Michigan has won a single National Championship and produced the Most Clutch Quarterback in the NFL, by the name of Tom Brady. However, the NFL should be known as the University of Miami Alumni Association, and THE “U.” has won FIVE (count them: 5) National Championships (should be seven. SEE FLAWED 2000 BCS System and 2003 National Championship Fiesta Bowl for the “Worst Call in Sports History”). Advantage: Miami  COLLEGE FOOTBALL COACHES: Lloyd Carr vs. Larry Choker (Ooops, I meant Coker) This is College Football’s version of Rich Kotite vs. Ray Handley. Advantage: PUSH  FAMOUS ALUMNI: Selma Blair & Dr. Jack Kevorkian vs. Michael Irvin & The “ROCK”. The “Playmaker” & The “ROCK” lay the Smackdown on all their Candy Asses. Advantage: Miami  WOMEN: Initially, this seems like a monumental mismatch. In terms of quantity, it’s a “NO CONTEST,” but we’re talking “quality” here. Miami/Ft. Lauderdale girls are FAKER than the silicone in their breasts. Motor City girls are HOT, but more importantly, they’re REAL. Advantage: Detroit  SPORTS FANS: This is a bigger mismatch than Microsoft vs. Enron. Detroit sports fans have suffered through years of futility with the Lions (still are) and Tigers, yet unconditionally support their teams through thick and thin. There were NO Heat fans before Wade and Shaq came to town…Alonz-“HO” Mourning is the epitome of a sell-out…the ’Canes CAN’T sell out the Orange Bowl unless they play Florida State or Virginia Tech…and despite winning TWO World Series Championships in the franchise’s first 11 years, the Marlins are now on the brink of contraction. Not a bad idea. While they’re at it, please contract all the “fair weather” fans too. Hands down, Miami is the “BANDWAGON FAN”/“WORST SPORTS TOWN IN AMERICA”! Advantage: Detroit  SPORTS TALK HOSTS: From what I have been told, it is NOT a prerequisite for prospective talent to have played for the Lions in order to have their own talk show. They actually have to be talented and entertaining broadcasters. Imagine that? What a novel idea! Advantage: Detroit  NFL TEAMS: Lions: NO Super Bowls; Dolphins: TWO Nick Saban could be the “next Bill Belichick” and Matt Millen is the “Isiah Thomas of NFL Front Offices.” Advantage: Miami  POINT GUARD: Chauncey “Mr. Big Shot” Billups (2004 NBA Finals MVP) vs. Jason “White Chocolate” Williams. This is about comparable to asking “What’s a better movie: THE GODFATHER or GIGLI?” Advantage: Detroit  SHOOTING GUARD: “RIP” Hamilton vs. Dwyane Wade. For non-NBA followers, it seems like a no-brainer, but this is a lot closer than it seems. By the way, who held D. Wade scoreless in the fourth quarter of Game Seven – 2005 Eastern Conference Finals? RIP, that’s who. However, this “Flash” most definitely has substance. Advantage: Miami  SMALL FORWARD: Tayshaun Prince vs. Antoine Walker. The battle of the Kentucky Wildcats. Celtic fans must be laughing, as Danny Ainge couldn’t wait until An-twahn Walk-ah (Boston accent) left town. He couldn’t play Defense if Tony Soprano held a gun to his head. Plus, Tayshaun is “Straight Outta Compton,” like Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, and Suge Knight. Advantage: Detroit  POWER FORWARD: Rasheed Wallace vs. Udonis Haslem. Haslem gets exploited like “Martha Stewart on Wall Street” or “Ashlee Simpson on Saturday Night Live” whenever these two face each other. ’Sheed is the best outside shooter 6’8” and above since a guy by the name of Bird. After a couple  more championships, he will be headed to my hometown of Springfield, to the Basketball Hall of Fame. Perhaps ’Sheed is the “James Worthy of the 21st Century.” Advantage: Detroit  CENTER: Ben Wallace (four-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year) vs. Shaquille O’Neal (three-time World Champion). Aside from a couple of playoff games, Shaq looks like a shadow of his former dominant self in this post-season. Shaq gets the edge, but “BIG BEN” will give him all he can handle. By the way, who was the center who beat Shaq when he was with the Lakers in ’04 and the Heat in ’05? Now, that guy goes for the hat trick. Advantage: Miami  COACHES: Flip Saunders vs. Pat Riley. Despite the fact that “Riles” hasn’t won anything since Whitney Houston and George Michael were atop the Billboard Charts in 1988, Flip only made it past the first round once in his career before he got to Detroit. Riley is a sure-fire Hall of Fame coach, from looking at his “pre-Miami” résumé. Conversely, check out his “post-New York” résumé; he’d have trouble getting into the WNBA Hall of Fame (See ’98, ’99, 2000 Home Court Season Ending Playoff losses to the Knicks; first round Playoff loss to the then Charlotte Hornets in ’01; draft lottery in ’02 & ’03). Aside from (figuratively) stabbing his best friend, Stan Van Gundy, in the back, he’s probably a nice guy. Advantage: Miami  FRONT OFFICES: Joe Dumars vs. Pat Riley. Hands down, Joe Dumars is the best executive in the NBA (SEE lopsided trades: Grant Hill for Ben Wallace & Chucky Atkins; Jerry Stackhouse for Richard Hamilton—you might call this a “RIP” OFF… PUN Intended). Joe D. may not be perfect, passing on D. Wade, Chris Bosh and Carmelo in the 2003 Draft for Darko, but he’s pretty damn close. Riley should know “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!” His team was a minute and a half away from the NBA Finals a year ago, so what did he do? Got rid of the team’s best three-point shooter, Damon Jones, legit point guard Keyon Dooling, underrated Rasual Butler, and best Defender, Eddie Jones, for “White Chocolate,” James “POSER,”  and two “way past their prime” egomaniacs—Walker & Payton. But, most of all, he FIRED his protégé, Stan Van Gundy, to appease his own ego.  Advantage: Detroit  PREDICTION: To quote my new friend, Frank Vincent, a.k.a. Billy Batts from “GOODFELLAS” and Phil Leotardo from “The Sopranos”: “MIAMI…GO HOME AND GET YOUR F---IN’ SHINEBOX!” Mickey Arison might sign the paychecks, but the PISTONS OWN the Heat! DETROIT ROLLS IN FIVE GAMES. GUARAN-“SHEED”! Don’t forget to listen to “The Sports Edge” with yours truly, a.k.a. “The REAL American Idol,” Marc Bednarczyk, & “The GREAT” Jim Grieshaber, every day on Sirius Satellite Radio (Channel 122) from 4-7 P.M. EASTERN.  ***All material is trademarked and copyrighted by me.  

The Sports Column - Heat

By Kevin RreaveyWagerWeb.com Contributing Writer It’s been a good, bad and ugly kind of week for me. I hit the trifecta at Pimlico--that’s good. My Little League kids went 0-3 with Coach Reavy in attendance--that’s bad. And Wednesday night, upon hearing of the reality demise of my “dawg,” Elliot Yamin, I was both sad to hear the news and disappointed in the realization that I had just watched 12 straight episodes of American Idol, spanning two months--that’s...well, you get the point. Fortunately for me, however, the sports world is never without its good, bad and ugly moments also. Here are the high (and low)lights of the week that’s passed. The Good: Barry Bonds’ 714th homerun ball--for Tyler Snyder, the guy who caught it. Surely the eBay--er, Bay Area-- faithful are proud of their slugger, and might even open up their checkbooks to make a bid for the historic blast. But, to me, nothing tells the story more beautifully than these four words uttered by Tyler, the soon-to-be rich Athletics fan (thanks to Bonds), after the game: “I hate that guy.” The NBA playoffs. While the highlight of my basketball season is admittedly the NBA draft, I can’t help but marvel at the fantastic series that have been played up to this point. It really has made me forget that the NHL is on strike. (Editor’s note: Kevin doesn’t receive the OLN channel.) After dropping five straight, the Phillies finally won. The Bad: After dropping five straight, the Phillies finally won. Cubs catcher, Michael Barrett, punched AJ Pierzynski after a collision at home plate. This is a bad thing only because I think Barrett may have hurt his hand when delivering the blow. NBC started airing episodes of the  “National Heads-Up Poker Championship.” This might be a good thing had ESPN not decided to air roughly 300 episodes of World Series of Poker tournaments on a constant loop on ESPN channels 1thru 6. This would be cool if the World Poker Tour and Celebrity Poker Who Gives a Crap weren’t already force-feeding its addictive felt-and-clay-chip abundant allure down my throat.  Instead, it’s overkill. Not because I hate watching poker shows on TV, but because I watch all of them. And I need my life back. The Ugly: Just one thing...Kobe’s attire on "Inside the NBA" last Wednesday. Because nothing says street cred like a powder-blue sweater vest. --That will do it for this week’s edition of The Sports Column. If I can avoid the TiVo-limit hold ‘em barrage this week, I’ll try to keep an eye out for the top stories for next time.Until then, enjoy the news as it happens.

Pay or Punish. Just Do Something

By Mike Rothman
WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer 
Let me paint a picture for you. It is this past Monday night; you have just opened another beer and are toasting with your friends. Why? Being the smart gambler that you are, you placed a significant wager on the San Antonio Spurs over the Dallas Mavericks, and the Spurs are up 111-109 with 15 seconds to go in the fourth quarter. Even more important, by betting on the Spurs, the Sportsbook gave you 4.5 points because the game is in Dallas. No need to worry about that now because the Spurs look like a lock to win outright.  “This game’s over. Finley’s three-pointer sealed the game,” your friend says.Dallas comes out of their timeout and predictably feeds the basketball to their star, Dirk Nowitzki. You are counting down the seconds, waiting for the final shot and the game to end, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8. Dirk is simply backing down in the paint and covered by San Antonio’s defensive stopper, Bruce Bowen. All of a sudden, a whistle blows, but nothing really happened. Did Dallas call a timeout? Nope. The referee calls a personal foul on Bruce Bowen, and the Spurs are over the foul limit.“WHAT, are you serious?” you start to scream. “Nothing happened!”A little bead of sweat begins to form on your brow, and you crouch about five inches from the television. Nowitzki calmly makes the first free throw. You cannot believe this is happening. Nowitzki calmly makes the second free throw. Duncan misses a last second shot, and the game goes into overtime. You still have the spread, but of course, the Mavericks end up winning the game, 123-118. Your money is gone. In the span of a second, you went from euphoria to depression. Why? Did you pick the game wrong or celebrate too early? No, poor officiating once again ruined another close game in another crucial situation. Why is the officiating so bad? There are two reasons. First, the salaries are too low, considering the power that these officials possess. For NBA refs, salaries can be as low as $90,000 per year. This may seem high, but it is not when compared to what players and coaches make. Furthermore, these officials are human, and there has to be some resentment that these guys control million dollar players, but make less than $100,000. This contributes to bad calls, consciously or unconsciously. Pay these guys. Put them on the same level as the players or at least the coaches. Level the playing field and better results will follow. I am not saying that refs should be paid millions of dollars, but they should at least receive more than they are making now. Some of these guys just do not care, and why should they?The other factor is the lack of punishment from the League Office. After game four in Dallas, multiple suspensions and fines should have come down on those officials, but basically, nothing happened. It was not just the last play of regulation that was called poorly, but rather, the entire game. On a team, if a player is not producing, he is benched. Why not do the same for professional officials? There needs to be a possible punishment in the mind of the official to ensure his full effort.Punish these guys. Again, try to level the ground and put the officials in the players’ shoes. Professional sports needs to put an end to the whole referee vs. player war and make a joint effort to create fair contests. This will result in classic games where the right team actually wins the game.I will leave you with one of the greatest current examples of poor officiating, Super Bowl XL. This game was atrocious. Actually, the game never seemed to start but was completely dominated by the officials. The TV ratings were the lowest for a Super Bowl in recent years, and anytime a great play was made, it was simply reversed by the refs. Why did this happen? This happened for the same reasons I stated above. NFL referees make as little as $25,000 a year and are considered part-time employees. Lonely sports writers make more than that. In addition, there was not really any severe punishment. This was the Super Bowl, one of the biggest sporting events of the year. People, we need to make a change across the board. If not, we are going to be left with these part-time employees controlling the fate of the biggest sporting events, and like it or not, our money is at stake.