Thursday, January 29, 1998

Maryland Falls to No. 1 Duke

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Gary Williams heard that things did not go well for his team.

The excitable Maryland coach spent exactly 5 minutes and 51 seconds pacing the sideline as No. 1 Duke beat the No. 23 Terrapins 86-59 Thursday night.

Williams spent the rest of the evening listening to the loss on the radio in the locker room after being thrown out of the game.

Maryland has lost its share of games in a variety of ways to the Blue Devils (19-1, 8-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) in Cameron Indoor Stadium, but none quite like this one as officials played a major factor in an ACC game for the second straight night.

One day after Clemson was called for an ACC-record 41 fouls in a nine-point loss at No. 2 North Carolina, Maryland was whistled for four technicals in the game's opening stages, including a pair that led to Williams' early ejection.

"I feel that you are responsible to be with your team during the game and I didn't do that. It's a shame things happened like they did," Williams said. "It probably wouldn't have made a difference if I was there or not."

The technicals led to 13 points and helped the Blue Devils win their 10th straight. Duke is also off to the second-best start in school history, just off the pace of the 1991-92 national championship team that began 21-1.

Trajan Langdon scored 12 of his 16 points in the first 6 1/2 minutes to pace the surging Blue Devils.

Meanwhile, the Terrapins (12-7, 5-4) had won five of six ACC games since losing to the Blue Devils by 32 points in College Park, Md., on Jan. 3. But Maryland was blown out again after losing its head coach and its composure.

"It's really a bad feeling because you ask your players to work really hard and do a lot of things for the good of the team and obviously what I did wasn't for the good of the team," Williams said. "I feel bad but I also feel frustrated because of the situation."

Rodney Elliott paced Maryland with 13 points.

The ACC office in Greensboro had sent a letter to schools this week warning teams about recent unacceptable bench and court behavior. Officials Larry Rose, Sam Croft and Zelton Steed took it seriously. Croft was the only one of the three to work Wednesday night's game in Chapel Hill.

"(The officials) are definitely trying to clean it up," said Duke's Ricky Price. "There were no warnings, they were just throwing T's. Fortunately, the coaches and the captains told us to keep our mouths shut and just play and if there was a bad call, just suck it up and run down the court.

"I saw that Clemson-Carolina game and all those fouls called, but I have never seen anything like this in my life, I'm just glad I'm on the team that capitalized on all the points."

The first Maryland technicals were called by Rose against Sarunas Jasikevicius for arguing a non-foul call on a screen and against Williams for taking up for his guard.

Langdon sank the four free throws and less than a minute later Williams was taking a walk to the locker room after Croft threw him out for arguing again. Williams, one of the game's more demonstrative coaches, was also thrown out last January at Florida State.

Williams said there was no cursing used by himself or any of his players during arguments with the officials. Rose said otherwise.

"I warned Gary three times about cursing and he continued," Rose said. "(The first technical) was the result of excessive language and being out of the coaching box."

Rose said the officiating crew received no special instructions from ACC supervisor of officials Fred Barakat following the Clemson-North Carolina game.

"Absolutely not," Rose said. "I have not talked to Fred since Monday."

Assistant Billy Hahn, who won here in 1995 when Williams had pneumonia, took over for his boss 5:51 into the game but didn't fare as well as three seasons ago as Duke went on a 19-2 run to take control of the game.

During that four-minute span, Langdon, William Avery and Steve Wojciechowski each sank 3-pointers and Maryland's Laron Profit was called for his team's fourth technical.

The Blue Devils led 37-12 before the Terrapins made a small run, but Duke took a 57-30 halftime lead and cruised to its 17th straight home victory.

Duke has led all 20 games at halftime by an average of 20.5 points

Tuesday, February 18, 1997

Errors Cast a Cloud Over A.C.C. Referees

By BARRY JACOBS
New York Times

The fierce competition in Atlantic Coast Conference basketball has been compromised by a pair of officiating gaffes that have given Duke an edge in the battle for first place and top seeding in next month's conference tournament.

The most recent error occurred on Sunday at Wake Forest, when Referee Mike Wood ruled that a shot by North Carolina State's C. C. Harrison was a 3-pointer, giving the last-place Wolfpack a 60-59 overtime victory. Replays clearly showed that Harrison's foot was on the 3-point line when he launched his leaning jump shot, which banked in at the buzzer.

''What can you do?'' Wake Forest Coach Dave Odom asked. ''What do you say? I'm not happy about it. You have a tendency when it happens to somebody else to say it's too bad. When it happens to you, it's really too bad.''

The loss dropped the Demon Deacons, who were then ranked second nationally, to 20-3 over all, 9-3 in the A.C.C., and out of first place in the conference for the first time this season. Surprising Duke, 21-5 and 10-3, can solidify its lead Tuesday night when it plays host to third-place Clemson (20-5, 8-4).

''If I allow my team to hang on that or hide behind that, then they have no chance to get better,'' Odom said, referring to the 3-point ruling.

But that does not lessen the impact of a mistake that was so obvious on replays, said Fred Barakat, the A.C.C.'s associate commissioner and for 16 years its supervisor of men's basketball officials.

''It's a judgment call,'' Barakat said. ''It happens a lot during the course of every game. It's unfortunate and I feel terrible for the Wake Forest fans because I know they feel it was unjust. It was unjust, in retrospect.''

The missed call came on the heels of another incident, at Virginia last Tuesday, in which Duke was also the beneficiary and which led to an unprecedented public censure of an A.C.C. officiating crew.

Barakat, who holds monthly telephone conferences with his top referees, had one scheduled right after the Wake Forest-North Carolina State game. He devoted the entire 45-minute session to reassurance.

''I put aside all my notes on traveling, palming, verticality, hand-checking and post play, and I just strictly talked about life, adversity and teamwork, and coming together when everybody's going to be out there criticizing and pointing fingers and knocking us,'' Barakat said. ''Now is the time for us to not bow our heads because we have a season to finish.''

The incidents have cast a cloud over the conference's referees, who earn from $550 to $650 per game plus expenses and whose full-time occupations range from school official to salesman to psychologist. Most of them apprenticed in smaller leagues before landing jobs with the A.C.C. This season, no fewer than three questionable last-second calls have affected outcomes of A.C.C. games.

Two cost Wake Forest dearly, the first a game-winning 3-pointer actually launched one-thirtieth of a second after the final buzzer in a 54-51 Maryland victory. ''That last shot in the Maryland game, God may have had trouble calling it,'' said Barakat, who analyzed videotape to determine that the shot came late. ''I think the danger here is to put everything into the same pot.''

The most disturbing error took place a week ago when Duke was playing at Charlottesville, Va. This time, no judgment call was involved as the referees failed to allow a simple but crucial substitution.

With the score 60-60, forward Norman Nolan went to the foul line for Virginia with five seconds left. Before Nolan released his shot, Virginia Coach Jeff Jones sent Willie Dersch to the scorer's table to check in. Dersch, a 6-foot-5-inch freshman from Floral Park, L.I., was being sent in to replace Nolan after the second free throw, a substitution the officials signaled among themselves.

Nolan missed the first free throw. His second almost popped out, then settled into the basket. But Referee Rick Hartzell, the athletic director at Bucknell University and a 14-year A.C.C. official, forgot about the substitution and raced upcourt in anticipation of a rush by Duke.

The scorekeeper, expecting the substitution, kept sounding the horn as the Blue Devils inbounded the ball to guard Steve Wojciechowski, who hurried toward the offensive end. But it was not until Wojciechowski had nearly reached the 3-point line that the game clock resumed ticking.

Meanwhile, several Virginia players had paused in confusion, letting Wojciechowski penetrate almost to the basket, where Nolan fouled him.

The foul call stood. After consulting a television monitor, the three officials, Hartzell, Tim Higgins and Zelton Steed, decided to put seven-tenths of a second on the game clock. Wojciechowski sank both free throws to give Duke a 62-61 victory.

Henry Nichols, the National Collegiate Athletic Association's national coordinator for men's basketball officiating, said he had ''never, ever'' seen anything like it.

Two days later Gene Corrigan, the A.C.C. commissioner, released a statement acknowledging ''that a serious officiating mechanics mistake was made by not allowing the Virginia substitute into the game.'' Corrigan announced that the crew would lose a league assignment and be subject to other internal action.

''This is as fundamental as it gets; basic game management procedures for our officials,'' Corrigan said.

Conferences have not wanted to use replays to rectify officiating errors because of the delays involved, uneven TV coverage and difficulty in defining the circumstances meriting such consultation.

As for the notion that the game is too fast for three officials to keep track of, Nichols said: ''That's a no-brainer. The game is too fast to be officiated by Moses, so we do the best we can.''

Thursday, February 1, 1996

Georgia Tech vs Duke