Josh Hart’s bucket with 2.8 seconds remaining that helped give the Knicks a 113-111 win over the Detroit Pistons on Monday night at Madison Square Garden shouldn’t have happened, NBA referee James Williams said.
Williams, who was the crew chief for Monday’s game, admitted the crew missed a foul call on the last-minute sequence that started with a missed three-pointer and involved three turnovers before Hart’s game-winner.
The sequence began with New York in possession and down one, after ex-Knick Quentin Grimes’ layup gave Detroit the lead with 37 seconds to play.
On Jalen Brunson’s missed three, Grimes corralled the rebound in the corner and found teammate Simone Fontecchio with a pass near the paint. Hart was able to stick out a hand and jar the ball free for Isaiah Hartenstein to recover and find Donte DiVincenzo at the top of the key. But his pass was deftly picked off by Detroit’s Ausar Thompson. And this is where the controversy started.
Thompson took two wild dibbles and the ball was beginning to escape his reach when DiVincenzo lunged in and got the ball and the man. After the two tumbled over, the loose ball was scooped up by Brunson, who took two dribbles and found an open Hart for the game-winner.
The referees said a foul should have been called with around 8.5 seconds to play.
“Upon postgame review, we determined that Thompson gets to the ball first, and then was deprived of the opportunity to gain possession of the ball,” referee James Williams said. “Therefore, a loose-ball foul should have been whistled on New York’s Donte DiVincenzo.”
The referee’s admission was little consolation to Pistons head coach Monty Williams, whose team fell to 8-49 on the season.
“The absolute worst call of the season,” he said after the game.