RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

You didn't read about it any newspapers I saw that are published in this state, and you didn't even see it in the story written by a guy from the Associated Press who covered the game. But an overlooked incident in Iowa's 71-69 overtime basketball loss to Michigan State last night was the technical foul assessed against Hawkeyes coach Fran McCaffery early in the last half. I checked the transcript of McCaffery's postgame press conference, and noticed that no reporter asked McCaffery about the technical. Evidently, most news people forgot, or for some reason didn't want to write about, the key call when they wrote their stories and columns about the game. The only person I noticed who wrote about the technical was Myron Medcalf, a blogger from ESPN.com, who obviously wasn't impressed with anything about the game, including the officiating and the fact that Iowa went almost 15 minutes without scoring a field goal. Here's what Medcalf wrote: 'Somehow, [Michigan State] knocked off No. 15 Iowa in a brutal Big Ten game that even the purists would call foul. There was nothing pretty about the 71-69 Michigan State overtime win. There were mostly mistakes. Officials made the bulk of them -- so many missed calls, confusing whistles and inconsistency. Early in the second half, Kieth Appling triple-jumped to the bucket and scored. It apparently wasn't a travel. Fran McCaffery drew a technical after he protested -- and that wasn’t the worst call of the night. The officials were joined in folly by the two teams competing against one another for a meaningful Big Ten win. You could have watched Titanic twice during Iowa’s lengthy stretch without a field goal [in reality, it a 14:50 period that started in the second half, bled into overtime and felt like forever]. There were 63 combined free throws [43 attempts by Iowa, 20 by Michigan State]. ' I watched the game on TV, and wondered what McCaffery, who is no stranger to being whistled for technical fouls, would say about the 'T' that resulted in Michigan State's Gary Harris making two free throws that tied the game, 32-32. But, like I said earlier, no reporter asked the Hawkeyes' coach about it in the postgame press conference. Not good, folks. Another reason newspaper circulation keeps nosediving. I agreed with Medcalf and with the TV announcers, who thought Appling traveled after stealing the ball and driving in for a layup. McCaffery was correct that the basket shouldn't have counted. However, from Iowa's perspective, it's too bad he was whistled for the 'T' for being out of the coaching box. Just think, had McCaffery not been whistled for the 'T' and had Harris not made the two free throws, Iowa might have won the game in regulation time, and people wouldn't be talking now about the Hawkeyes players' basketball toughness or lack of basketball toughness.