Fans in New Orleans were furious when officials missed a critical call on the final play of a loss.

No, this isn’t a recap of Sunday’s New Orleans Saints playoff loss to the Minnesota Vikings.

New Orleans sports fans relived their everlasting grievance with officials in Monday’s Pelicans loss to the Utah Jazz.

Officials miss foul on game’s final shot

The Pelicans, riding a streak of five wins in six games after an atrocious start to the season found themselves trailing 128-126 in the final seconds when Brandon Ingram grabbed a rebound off a missed Bojan Bogdanovic 3-pointer.

The Pelicans forward ran the length of the floor where he was greeted at the basket by two-time Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert. The Jazz center put both hands up to challenge the layup and appeared to make contact with Ingram as he released the ball.

Time ran out, and Jazz players left the floor for the victorious locker room.

New Orleans sports fans are yet again hot about late-game officiating. (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images) More

Replay or no replay?

Pelicans players remained, and officials checked the monitor. But they weren’t implementing the NBA’s new replay review system. They were checking to see if time remained on the clock.

Referee Kane Fitzgerald explained the final seconds from the officials perspective to a pool reporter.

“On the last play, we saw the drive to the basket by Ingram, and we felt during live play that Rudy played legal defense,” Fitzgerald said.

And about that replay?

“The review was to to make sure there wasn’t a clock malfunction,” Fitzgerald said. “After review there was none. That made the game over.”

A last-two-minute report released on Tuesday by the NBA acknowledges that Gobert did foul Ingram.

Last two minute report says Gobert fouled Ingram.



Pelicans should’ve had two FTs to tie and send the game to OT. pic.twitter.com/GRrh5CpP1o — Andrew Lopez (@_Andrew_Lopez) January 7, 2020

Pelicans fans furious

When that decision was made, boos rained down from the Smoothie King Center crowd that had watched the replay and saw that Gobert clearly swiped Ingram on his arm before he released the ball.

But as TV announcers thought that officials were reviewing for a foul, they missed a key component of the challenge/replay process. Only called fouls and violations can be reviewed.

Rules don’t allow for officials to correct mistake

Non-calls aren’t subject to review. From the NBA’s rules regarding coach’s challenges:

A team can use its challenge for:

Personal foul calls on its own team at any time in the game; and

Out-of-bounds and goaltending/basket interference calls during the first 46 minutes of the game and the first three minutes of OT.

In the last two minutes of the fourth period and OT, out-of-bounds and goaltending/basket interference call reviews will be exclusively triggered by on-court referees.

Teams cannot challenge non-calls or other types of calls not listed.

Flawed system

Officials did not call Gobert for a foul, therefore there was no means to correct their mistake. Even if there was, there’s no telling what the standard is for overturning a play in a system that appears to be as flawed as the NFL’s.

The league’s mandate that “clear and conclusive visual evidence” will overturn a call has not been consistent this season.

The NBA has a system that allows officials to correct some mistakes but not others instead of one that allows officials the chance to just get things right.

It’s infuriating to fans, players and coaches who find themselves on the wrong end of things.

It’s a pain New Orleans sports fans know all too well.

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