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Stopwatch costs Boise State win

Coach upset by clock ruling

Boise State coach Leon Rice is still trying to wrap his head around this basketball brainteaser: Beating the buzzer with a winning basket doesn’t necessarily mean you win the game.

Perplexed?

So were the Broncos after James Webb III banked in a 3-pointer with no time left in overtime to give them what they thought was an 87-84 win over Colorado State on Wednesday in Fort Collins, Colorado.

Only, the winning shot was overturned after officials went to the monitors and utilized a digital stopwatch embedded within the video overlay in the instant replay system. Through that, it was determined the clock didn’t start on time and thus Webb didn’t get the shot off in time. Boise State ended up losing 97-93 in double overtime.

Rice’s frustration isn’t so much with the official’s decision, which was upheld by the Mountain West Conference after the game and again Thursday when the league released video.

No, his concern revolves around the use of such technology.

“It opens a can of worms,” Rice said in a phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday. “Why are those milliseconds (at the end) more important than any other time throughout the game?

“Because all my life I’ve gone off the clock on the scoreboard — and he got it off before that.”

Here’s how the play in question unfolded: Boise State inbounded the ball to Webb with 0.8 seconds left, with Webb catching it and immediately shooting it toward the rim.

The basket was good.

Game over, right?

Rice saw red light up around the basket a split second after Webb’s shot was released, so he figured the officials would confirm the bucket once they went to the monitor to look at the play.

When they waved off the basket, Rice really saw red.

“I was all ready to run to the locker room and dump Gatorade on each other,” Rice said.

Even Colorado State coach Larry Eustachy felt that was a wrap.

At his postgame news conference Wednesday, Eustachy said he was just “waiting to hear the bad news. When they (the players) saw me turn around and clap, they were excited. They were really excited. It took a lot of courage to figure out the right call. Clearly, when he caught it to when he got it off, it took 1.3 seconds. ... Bizarre game. Bizarre.”

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