I made this a new topic because I wanted to discuss more than simply, "Was Barry Fouled?". To get that out of the way and succinctly answer the question. Yes, Barry was fouled. Now then did the Spurs deserve to win the game. No. While the direct result of the "non-call" results in a Spurs loss, the culmination of effort and actions throughout the entire game from the Spurs reflected the proper consequence.
While the NBA rule book specifically delineates a definition for a "foul"; the truth of the matter is, a foul is not always a foul. In practice, the rules do not apply the same way to the same situations. I don't envy the plight of the NBA referee, after all, its my belief that 5 on 5 basketball is one of the hardest games to arbitrate. Still the extreme inconsistency, stubborn refusal by the league office to implement technological aide, and overall culture of the NBA filtered through the superstar spectrum has resulted in absolutely the worst officiating of a multi-million dollar gaming endeavor in our country. I consider myself a fan of the NBA, almost as much as I identify with a particular team or a particular player, and it stings to admit the depths of inequity that grips officiating in this league.
In going back to the recent example at hand, Barry's teammates lament the fact he didn't do exactly what the league wants to eradicate in the first place. Namely, flopping or selling the foul. Through the inconsistent application of the rule, the referees breed further and more sophisticated aberrant action. These unwritten rules of make-up calls, superstar calls, shifting stances on physicality erodes the innocense of competition and sportsmanship. Why should an erroneous no-call be sufficient justice in response to an erroneous shot-clock reset? With the technology at our disposal, the cameras, the angles, the slow motion, the digital preciseness of picture, why should an official have to guess at whether a ball grazed a rim. Why should an official have to guess at exactly how much time ticked off after a clock malfunction. Why does contact against Kobe constitute a foul on Harpring while the same contact does not constitute a foul on Bowen. Why should the same low post maneuver that gets Turiaf charged with traveling be perfectly legal for Tim Duncan. Why should the technical whistle be faster for Kobe and Rasheed then for Redd and Garnett. Why? The answer is simple. There is no accountability placed on the NBA to improve the officiating. Dollar signs speak to the health and viability of the league, as opposed to pure adherance to the rules, and we the consumers are satisfied. We'll incessantly gripe but we won't stop watching and that is really all that matters.
Despondant though I remain that officiating will continue to skew, I'd even go so far as to say subtely pervert, the games I love to watch. Angry though I become that this ridiculous notion of players and coaches having to "adjust" to the referees is part and parcel of this noble game. I'll continue to be a fan and I'll continue to watch . . .
. . . and continue to gripe.