I'm going to chime in here, because frankly I had the same exact reaction to your post as JoMaL did, Lurker. You're argument (and subsequent whining about inconsistency) for why the foul was not called on Bruce Bowen doesn't hold any water. First you state that Bowen's foul was incidental -- lay off the crackpipe. Bowen intentionally, not incidentally, fouled LeBron: he intentionally grabbed LeBron around the waste with his arm to make sure the foul was on the floor. Now you can argue that LeBron noticed this action and THEN went into a shooting motion so the foul would indeed be called on the floor, but you CANNOT argue that the foul was incidental, ticky tack, contact that was a no-call for the consistency of the game. LeBron got fouled by Bowen, Cleveland Ball on the side was the right call in my book.
Now as to your comment about Ginobili's offensive foul when Varejao was clearly not set while seemingly the same exact play with LeBron and Bowen was called a Blocking foul -- and you say Van Gundy noticed it. Danny Crawford explained to Ginobili (and I read his lips and body language) why it was an offensive foul. It was a charge NOT because Varejao was set but because Ginobili swung his off-arm elbow into Varejao's chest to try and create the contact before the release of the shot. LeBron James didn't have any swinging motion of his off arm to get the shot off and his defender (Bowen) was not set, thereby -- Blocking foul.
Also I believe a missed and1 call went in the Spurs favor. The one on Tony Parker which was committed by Drew Gooden (2nd or 3rd quarter). They gave Tony a continuation call and free throws even though he was clearly in the middle of a spin move and hadn't even started attempting the shot--Van Gundy noticed that one, too, so did Mike Breen. I believe this offset the foul later on in the game commited by Bowen on LeBron in which continuation was wrongly called. By my count, that makes continuation mistakes 1-1.
The offensive foul on LeBron as he was posting up with 6 min. to go in the 2nd quarter was pure, unabashed, BS. Much more "questionable" (using your word) as Duncan's offensive foul. Bowen clearly flopped and had the Refs been calling that type of thing a foul -- Karl Malone wouldn't even rank in the NBA Top 50 in scoring, let alone 2nd all time. Now then, the Refs realized they had just taken a dump on the court and made the obligatory makeup call on the Duncan foul when Zydrunas went across the middle. It was a make-up call through and through, and I agree that I absolutely HATE makeup calls, but that's the culture the NBA has fostered ever since I've started watching it. I think correcting your mistake then and there is better, lead official Crawford should've called a Ref council and overturned the foul on LeBron, until last night's game the Ref's had been good about doing this type of thing. Still going back to the theme of this post, Cavs and Spurs were even 1-1.
I don't think Cleveland fans have any right to say they were wronged.
I don't think San An fans have any right to say they were wronged.
Mistakes were made but it was for all purposed called even, sometimes evenly BAD, but even nonetheless. We know you're a diehard Spurs fan, Lurker, but let's maintain some semblance of objectivity for posterity's sake. You're up 3-0, I think you can afford to.