Los Angeles Lakers Call Out Officiating Following Game 2 Loss To Oklahoma City Thunder

Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) reacts after a play.

The Los Angeles Lakers are officially staring down the barrel of a massive playoff hole. After getting run out of the gym in a 125-107 Game 2 blowout, they are now trailing the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder 2-0. But if you ask anyone in the purple and gold locker room, the real story of Thursday night wasn’t the box score. It was the whistle. Or, more accurately, the lack of one.

When you have players and coaches collectively losing their minds over the officiating, you know it was a long night. From early technical fouls to heated, face-to-face shouting matches with the referees, the Lakers didn’t just battle the Thunder; they went to war with the officials.

JJ Redick Torches the Officiating

Lakers Head Coach JJ Redick practically needed a blood pressure monitor on the sideline. Redick picked up a technical foul early in the first quarter after exploding on referee Ben Taylor, setting the tone for a night filled with sideline rage.

During his postgame presser, Redick completely took the gloves off. He sarcastically praised the Thunder for being the most “disruptive team without fouling,” heavily implying that Oklahoma City gets away with murder on the defensive end. He specifically pointed out that Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander gets feather-light touch fouls, while his own guys get absolutely clobbered in the paint with zero reward.

LeBron James and the Disappearing Free Throws

Redick saved his heaviest artillery for the treatment of LeBron James. According to the furious coach, the four-time MVP suffers from “the worst whistle of any star player” he has ever seen.

And looking at the numbers, you can kind of see his point. LeBron drives to the rim like a runaway freight train, absorbing heavy contact on nearly every possession. Yet, through two games in this series, he has only shot a grand total of five free throws. In Game 2, James was visibly exhausted by the lack of calls, frequently throwing his hands up after absorbing hits that routinely put him on the floor. When asked about the officiating postgame, a visibly irritated James kept it brief: “We’re down 2-0.”

Austin Reaves vs. Referee John Goble

While LeBron was quietly seething, Austin Reaves let it all out. Reaves actually had a spectacular night, bouncing back from a miserable Game 1 to drop a playoff-career-high 31 points on 10-of-16 shooting. But his elite scoring took a back seat to a wild fourth-quarter altercation with referee John Goble.

During a dead-ball situation preparing for a jump ball, video caught Goble turning around and seemingly yelling right into Reaves’ face. The Lakers guard recoiled in pure surprise before losing his temper, requiring teammates to physically hold him back.

Reaves didn’t mince words after the buzzer sounded. He felt completely disrespected, noting that if a player ever screamed in an official’s face like that, they would be hit with an immediate technical foul and probably ejected. Reaves confidently stated the only reason he didn’t get T’d up during his retaliation was because Goble knew he had crossed the line.

Can the Lakers Bounce Back In Game 3?

Now, the Lakers are heading back to Los Angeles with their backs firmly against the wall. The Thunder are young, deep, and playing with the swagger of a team that expects to repeat as champions.

If the Lakers want to keep their playoff hopes alive, they have to protect their home court on Saturday night. More importantly, they need to find a way to channel all this mounting frustration and anger into actual stops and buckets, rather than screaming at the guys in stripes.

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