San Francisco Chronicle

⏩ Game 1 fallout: Cavs’ Love, Thompson avoid suspension.

- By Ron Kroichick Ron Kroichick is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: rkroichick@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @ronkroichi­ck

One fascinatin­g game into the NBA Finals — after LeBron James scored 51 points, Stephen Curry provided his customary entertainm­ent and J.R. Smith became a universal punch line — the officials found themselves in a prominent role.

This stretched from Ken Mauer and Tony Brothers, two of the referees who worked Game 1 on Thursday night, to league executives who spent Friday contemplat­ing whether to hand out suspension­s. Mauer reversed a crucial charging call on Warriors forward Kevin Durant in the final minute of regulation, enraging the Cavaliers.

They found some relief upon learning forward Kevin Love and center Tristan Thompson will not be suspended for Game 2 on Sunday. Love came onto the court after Brothers ejected Thompson in overtime, then returned to the bench as Thompson and Warriors forward Draymond Green got into a brief altercatio­n.

Thompson was slapped with a flagrant foul for hitting Shaun Livingston with a high elbow while contesting his shot in the waning seconds. He faced the real possibilit­y of suspension for Game 2, but the league instead hit him with a $25,000 fine, according to ESPN.

Green, animatedly clapping and waving goodbye, goaded Thompson after the ejection. He responded by angrily shoving the ball in Green’s face, sparking a scuffle involving several players.

“I thought that was uncalled for,” Warriors guard Klay Thompson said of Tristan Thompson’s actions.

Love eluded suspension despite a longtime NBA rule prohibitin­g players from leaving the bench area during an on-court incident. Most memorably, Patrick Ewing was among five New York players suspended for one game after he came onto the court during a fight with Miami in the 1997 Eastern Conference semifinals.

Ten years later, in the 2007 West semifinals, Phoenix’s Amar’e Stoudemire and Boris Diaw were suspended for leaving the bench after San Antonio’s Robert Horry knocked Steve Nash into the scorer’s table.

In this case, league officials apparently decided Love retreated to the bench when the heated dialogue between Tristan Thompson and Green turned physical.

As for Thursday night’s overturned call, Cavs head coach Tyronn Lue had calmed down a bit by Friday. Lue was angry after the game, saying James got “robbed” when Mauer and Brothers, after reviewing video of the initial charge call on Durant, reversed their decision.

The play happened with 36.4 seconds left in regulation and Cleveland ahead 104-102. Durant drove the lane and ran over James, who had slid into his path. Mauer later said the call was reviewed because they had doubts James was outside the restricted area.

Replays showed he clearly was outside the area, but referees also can reassess the block/ charge call on video. They decided James was not stationary when Durant collided with him. Durant subsequent­ly made two free throws to tie the game.

The league, in its standard review of the last two minutes of a close game, stood by Mauer for reviewing the play and also for his decision to overturn the original call.

“It was a tough call, we understand that,” Lue said Friday. “But now we have to bounce back and be ready for Game 2. We were disappoint­ed by the loss, but it’s behind us now.”

Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, asked about the policy permitting officials to overturn judgment calls after video review, took a diplomatic stance.

“I’m not a huge fan of replay,” Kerr said. “I would like to see replay limited rather than expanded, but it doesn’t matter what I think. The rule is a rule . ... In the end, I thought they got the call right. It was clearly a block.”

Said James after the game: “I thought I read that play just as well as any in my career, defensivel­y. I saw the drive, I was outside the charge line, I stepped in and took the contact. It’s a huge play.”

One notable nugget in the league’s review of the final two minutes of Game 1: Green should have been called for a lane violation on George Hill’s missed free-throw attempt with 4.7 seconds left and the game tied at 107-107. The NBA report characteri­zed the no-call as “incidental.”

Smith rebounded Hill’s miss and dribbled out most of the clock, apparently thinking his team was ahead.

 ?? Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle ?? Officials Ken Mauer (left) and Ed Malloy discuss a crucial foul call involving LeBron James and Kevin Durant in Game 1.
Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle Officials Ken Mauer (left) and Ed Malloy discuss a crucial foul call involving LeBron James and Kevin Durant in Game 1.

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