NBA teams
Dave McMenamin, ESPN Staff Writer 9y

Cavs coach David Blatt on near-timeout blunder: 'I almost blew it'

NBA, Cleveland Cavaliers, Chicago Bulls

CHICAGO -- Before LeBron James got the chance to win Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on a buzzer-beating shot against the Chicago Bulls, twice in the last 10 seconds of the game, Cleveland Cavaliers coach David Blatt's actions nearly prevented that scenario.

The first occurred with 9.4 seconds left in the fourth quarter after Chicago's Derrick Rose tied the game at 84. Blatt took four steps onto the court as the Cavs prepared to put the ball in bounds under the basket, and he put his hands together to signal for a timeout. Cleveland associate head coach Tyronn Lue quickly pulled Blatt back toward the baseline to keep the coach from drawing any referee's attention with his timeout request.

Cleveland was out of timeouts by that point, having burned its final two timeouts with 18.8 seconds left when James Jones could not find an open man when trying to inbound the ball at half court. If Blatt had been granted the timeout, the Cavs would have been penalized with a technical foul, resulting in one free throw for the Bulls plus a loss of possession, giving the ball back to the Bulls after the free throw.

"Yeah, I almost blew it, to be honest with you," Blatt said after the Cavs' 86-84 win to knot the series 2-2, acknowledging the intended timeout. "I think we called two or three timeouts there on that sideline out. And good thing they caught it, my guys."

No members of the three-man officiating crew -- Scott Foster, Tom Washington and Jason Phillips -- were particularly close to Blatt on the court when the coach made his initial signal before Lue stopped him.

"It's huge," James said when asked about the impact of Blatt's timeout request being missed by the officials. "Obviously, we all know we didn't have any timeouts at that time and we call one, we get a T. So, that's why we're a unit. That's why we're a team. And players make mistakes, coaches make mistakes and we have to be able to cover for one another. And T-Lue did that by covering for Blatt, and I just try to cover for my guys on the floor. That's why we're a unit."

Mike Bantom, the NBA's executive vice president of referee operations, said in a statement that none of the referees saw Blatt signal for a timeout.

"The referees knew that neither team had a timeout remaining, so their focus was on the court," Bantom said. "None of the three officials saw Coach Blatt signal for a timeout."

In January, ESPN's Brian Windhorst reported that Lue often called timeouts for Blatt during games.

Another instance that could have changed the outcome of the game was Blatt originally calling for a play that would have had James passing it in from underneath the hoop with 1.5 seconds remaining rather than taking the last shot.

"To be honest, the play that was drawn up, um, I scratched it," James said after the game. "And I told Coach, 'Just give me the ball. And it's either going to overtime or I'm going to win it for us.' It was that simple.

"I was supposed to take the ball out. I told Coach there was no way I'm taking the ball out unless I could shoot it over the backboard and go in. So, I told him, have somebody else take the ball out and give me the ball and get out of the way."

Cavs backup guard Matthew Dellavedova ended up taking the ball out of bounds. James faked toward the hoop to buy himself a bit of space with Jimmy Butler guarding him and then cut to the corner, where Dellavedova found him for the 21-foot jump shot that went through the net as time expired.

J.R. Smith was asked by a reporter whether there was any doubt James would end up with the final shot regardless of the initial play call.

"It was doubt at first because at first, Coach had LeBron taking the ball out," Smith said. "I'm like, 'Are you sure?' Then he went, 'No, no, no, no, Bron, you get it.' I'm like, 'OK, we need to switch it up.' Once we figured out who was definitely taking the ball out, I was like, 'OK, now I'm sure he's going to get it.'"

Blatt was specifically asked after the game whether he drew up the final play to get James open for the shot and did not reveal that James changed the play call.

"Yeah, we wanted him to throw it right in over the shoulder and with that amount of time on the clock, let him take a shot and he did," Blatt said. "Great play."

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