Head of officials defends NCAA tournament officiating

Despite a torrent of close games and strange plays, all occurring under greater-than-ever media scrutiny, the referees in the NCAA tournament are getting it right most of the time, their boss said.
"We've had 52 games, and I think we're really only talking about plays in two or three of the games," John Adams, NCAA supervisor of officials, said Tuesday. "I would tell you I'm very pleased so far. We always strive to get all of them right in every game, and we'll keep trying to do that."

By Jack Gruber, USA TODAY
Adams says he was caught "a little off-balance" by the speed and volume of reaction by media outlets during the first full weekend of the tournament, particularly after controversial endings of the Pittsburgh-Butler and Texas-Arizona games.
"I don't think the Pitt-Butler game was over five minutes before my cell started going off with everybody wanting to know what we thought of the end of the game," he said. "I probably got texts and e-mails from 10 or 20 media sources within five or 10 minutes.
"I can't remember this many games over the course of the six days that were so close and came down to the last minute of play. Everybody's focus gets a little sharper, whether it's fans, coaches or media. The last minute seems to be what everybody remembers."
The Pitt-Butler game ended after two foul calls in the final 1.5 seconds that some critics have said should not have been called.
"All year long, we've asked the officials to enforce the rules as written," Adams said. "A foul is a foul. If it's a foul in the first minute, it's a foul in the last minute."
It wasn't the Pitt-Butler game or the Texas-Arizona games, though, that had Adams admitting an officiating error.
Adams said in a statement issued by the NCAA that a backcourt violation should not have been called against Syracuse in the last minute of a tie game Sunday. The ball was awarded to Marquette, which hit a three-pointer and went on to win 66-62.

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