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Home » This Week » NBA: Missed call late in Lakers-Nuggets thriller
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NBA: Missed call late in Lakers-Nuggets thriller

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: March 15, 2026 8:50 pm
Yeti NewsBot
9 Min Read
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NBA: Missed call late in Lakers-Nuggets thriller

NBA Admits Critical Late-Game Error in Lakers-Nuggets Thriller

The thin air in Denver is known for taking one’s breath away. For the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday night, it was a controversial whistle that left them gasping, only to have the NBA’s Last Two Minute Report confirm their worst suspicions 48 hours later. In a dramatic, high-stakes rematch of last season’s Western Conference Finals, the Denver Nuggets edged the Lakers 115-112. Yet, the post-game conversation has been dominated not by Nikola Jokić’s triple-double, but by a single play with 9.2 seconds left—a play the league has now officially deemed incorrect.

Contents
  • The Crucible: A Season-Defining Moment Under Review
  • Beyond the Whistle: The Ripple Effect of Officiating
  • Expert Analysis: Process, Not Outcome
  • Looking Ahead: Implications for the Western Conference Race
  • Final Buzzer: Truth, Transparency, and an Unchangeable Scoreboard

The Crucible: A Season-Defining Moment Under Review

With the score tied at 112-112, the Lakers inbounded the ball to Austin Reaves, who immediately faced defensive pressure from Denver’s Spencer Jones. As Reaves attempted to drive left, Jones reached in. The sharp sound of the official’s whistle pierced the roar of the Ball Arena crowd. A foul was called on Jones, sending Reaves to the free-throw line where he calmly sank both shots to give Los Angeles a fleeting two-point lead.

The sequence, however, felt instantaneous. Replays from multiple angles suggested a clean, swift, and decisive play on the ball. The NBA’s Last Two Minute Report, released Monday, confirmed what many viewers suspected: it was a missed call.

The official ruling stated: “Jones (DEN) makes clean contact with the ball and then Reaves (LAL) loses possession after Jones makes subsequent contact with Reaves’ arm.” In the league’s judgment, the initial clean strip rendered the subsequent, marginal contact incidental. No foul should have been called. Reaves should not have been at the line. The game, likely, should have continued with a Denver possession and a chance to win in regulation.

Beyond the Whistle: The Ripple Effect of Officiating

While the Lakers were the immediate beneficiaries of the erroneous call, the basketball gods—and Jamal Murray—swiftly delivered a form of cosmic justice. Murray answered Reaves’ free throws with a cold-blooded step-back jumper over Anthony Davis to force overtime, where the Nuggets ultimately prevailed. This outcome, however, does not negate the significance of the league’s admission.

This incident opens a broader discussion about late-game officiating in the NBA:

  • The “Swallow the Whistle” Doctrine: There’s a long-held, unofficial tenet in basketball that officials should avoid making marginal, game-deciding calls in the final moments. This play was a stark violation of that principle, as the contact was deemed insufficient even by the league’s own standards.
  • Challenge Dynamics: Nuggets coach Michael Malone had already used his coach’s challenge earlier in the quarter, successfully overturning an out-of-bounds call. This left him powerless to contest the Reaves foul, highlighting the strategic weight and limitation of the challenge system in high-leverage situations.
  • Psychological Impact: The call fundamentally altered the end-game script. Instead of Denver having the ball with a chance to win, they were suddenly trailing and facing a must-score scenario. The mental shift for both teams, though unquantifiable, is immense.

For the Lakers, the report’s findings are a brutal twist of the knife. It transforms a tough road loss into a “what could have been” scenario plagued by an external error. For the Nuggets, it validates their resilience but also underscores how precarious a title defense can be, where a single whistle can nearly derail a hard-fought victory.

Expert Analysis: Process, Not Outcome

As a seasoned observer, it’s critical to analyze the process, not just the outcome. The officials on the floor have a split-second to make a judgment on a play involving two rapidly moving athletes. The angle from the lead official’s position likely made the play appear as a reach across the body, warranting the initial call. This is human error in its purest, most high-pressure form.

However, the NBA’s transparency via the Last Two Minute Report is a double-edged sword. It provides accountability and quells some conspiracy theories, but it also fuels frustration for teams and fans because the admission comes with no recourse. The result stands. The league office, in this case, acted as a historian, not a judge with the power to overturn.

The key basketball takeaway is Spencer Jones’s defensive execution. A two-way player thrust into a crucial moment, he executed a near-perfect defensive play—the kind coaches draw up and practice for months. That his effort was nearly undone by a whistle, only to be saved by Murray’s heroics, is the micro-story of an NBA role player’s existence.

Looking Ahead: Implications for the Western Conference Race

In the macro view of the season, this single play could carry substantial weight. The Western Conference playoff picture is notoriously brutal, and seeding is often decided by a single game.

  • For the Lakers: Every loss against a direct competitor like Denver is a missed opportunity. Falling to 0-3 against the defending champions plants a significant psychological hurdle and could impact tiebreaker scenarios down the line. The team’s margin for error in the crowded West is now even thinner.
  • For the Nuggets: The win reinforces their clutch gene and their dominance over the Lakers, extending their winning streak against them to several games. More importantly, it banked a critical victory that maintains their position near the top of the conference, a valuable asset for home-court advantage in the playoffs.
  • The Season Series: With this officiating note now part of the ledger, the next matchup between these two teams will be charged with even more intensity. Officials will be under a microscope, and players will know that every possession, down to the final second, is magnified.

Final Buzzer: Truth, Transparency, and an Unchangeable Scoreboard

The NBA’s admission is a rare moment of official clarity in a sport often shrouded in subjective interpretation. It tells us that Spencer Jones made a great play, that the officials made an understandable but incorrect call, and that Jamal Murray’s brilliance ultimately wrote the final, legitimate chapter of the game.

Yet, the lingering question is one of philosophy: does this transparency help or hurt? For the Lakers, the report is a phantom pain for a wound that never truly heals—the loss that was almost a win. For the Nuggets, it’s a footnote of justification in a win column that needed none. The scoreboard, the ultimate and unforgiving arbiter, remains unchanged. In the marathon of the NBA season, this single missed call is a stark reminder that while the league can provide the truth after the fact, it cannot rewrite history. The journey to the playoffs, as always, will be paved with moments of supreme skill, human error, and the relentless pursuit of a fairness that is, at times, just out of reach.


Source: Based on news from ESPN.

Image: CC licensed via www.piqsels.com

TAGGED:Lakers vs Nuggets missed callLeBron James no-callNBA officiating controversyNBA playoff controversyNBA referee error
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