Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Wild finish results in 5 errors by refs

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The NBA said Tuesday there were five incorrect non-calls on the wild final sequence in San Antonio on Monday night, including a foul on the Thunder’s Dion Waiters that referees earlier acknowledg­ed they missed.

The league agreed with the refs that Waiters should have been whistled for knocking Manu Ginobili back with his elbow to create space to throw an inbounds pass, but it also ruled in its Last 2 Minutes report that Ginobili first committed a delay-of-game violation by stepping on the sideline as he was defending.

The inbounds play began a frenzied final 13.5 seconds in the Thunder’s 98-97 victory over the Spurs in Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals. The Spurs ended up stealing Waiters’ pass to Kevin Durant to start a fast break but couldn’t score, leaving the series tied at 1-1.

Referee Ken Mauer, the crew chief, said after the game that upon seeing a review of the play there should have been an offensive foul called on Waiters. On Tuesday, the referees union wrote on Twitter that it had never seen the play before and would incorporat­e it into its training moving forward.

“Waiters’ foul on Ginobili was the worst missed call in playoff history,” Hall of Famer Magic Johnson wrote on Twitter after the game.

But the problems didn’t stop there.

The league determined that the Spurs’ Kawhi Leonard and Patty Mills grabbed and held Thunder players, affecting their movement and ability to get open to catch the inbounds pass. Once the Spurs came up with it, Mills ended up getting a jumper from the corner that missed.

The Spurs couldn’t get off a clean attempt on the offensive rebound, and the league determined that was because the Thunder’s Serge Ibaka grabbed LaMarcus Aldridge’s jersey and affected his shot attempt.

Had that been called, Aldridge — who scored 41 points and made all 10 free throws — would have attempted two shots from the line to win the game.

Varejao foul Flagrant 1: Warriors backup center Anderson Varejao insists he didn’t deliberate­ly trip Trail Blazers guard Gerald Henderson in Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinal series, but the NBA ruled it a Flagrant 1 foul.

He and Henderson were both ejected Sunday.

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