Houston Chronicle

Change to give coaches option

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NBA coaches likely will be challengin­g one call per game next season.

The league told teams Friday that, pending expected approval by the board of governors on July 9, coaches may challenge a personal foul charged to their team, a called out-ofbounds violation, a goaltendin­g violation or a basket-interferen­ce violation. No other call may be challenged.

“We anticipate this rule will be in effect in the NBA next season as a one-year pilot program,” NBA Basketball Operations President Byron Spruell told teams in the memo, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press. ESPN first reported the memo’s contents.

The NBA already has a call-challenge program in place in the G League and tinkered with it during summer league last year. It will be used during all three summer leagues this season — the four-team league in Sacramento and Salt Lake City that open Monday, and the one in Las Vegas that opens July 5.

Unlike the NFL version of a challenge, there’s no flag to be used and teams will not retain them even if successful. A team will have to call timeout and the coach “must immediatel­y signal for a challenge by twirling his/her index finger toward the referees,” the memo said.

A challenge must come immediatel­y after the play and challenges of out-ofbounds calls, goaltendin­g or basket interferen­ce will not be permitted in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter or the last two minutes of overtime.

“As with other replay reviews, in order to overturn the event as called on the floor, there must be clear and conclusive visual evidence that the call was incorrect,” the memo said.

If the challenge is unsuccessf­ul, the team will lose its timeout. If the challenge is upheld, no timeout will be charged.

Also likely coming: Instant replay can be triggered by officials in the review center in Secaucus, N.J., without the involvemen­t of the on-court crew.

The league said it wants to give the replay center the authority to review whether a shot was a 2pointer or 3-pointer without on-court crews asking for it, as well as the ability to review potential shotclock violations. A courtside administra­tor would be added to the crew at the scorer’s table to communicat­e with the replay center and then be the liaison to announce any immediate scoring changes.

In Las Vegas, a new high-tech element will make its debut. What the NBA calls a “connected basketball” will sometimes be in use for those games. The NBA said it has been working with Spalding and other vendors to develop a basketball with a tracking chip inside, and prototypes will be tried out during the Vegas league. Some companies have been in the smart-ball game for a few years, offering users the chance to use apps to track their accuracy and other data.

CELTICS HIRE LAWSON

Kara Lawson has been hired by Boston as an assistant coach.

Lawson, 38, becomes the latest woman to serve as a coach in the NBA, joining San Antonio’s Becky Hammon, Dallas’ Jenny Boucek and Cleveland’s Lindsay Gottlieb.

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