Ex-NBA referee Joey Crawford advocates for challenge systems - ESPN
INDIANAPOLIS — Joey Crawford, one of the most polarizing NBA referees during his lengthy stint in the league, said the new challenge systems across sports are good because they hold officials accountable.
This season, Major League Baseball introduced its automated ball-strike (ABS) system. Batters, pitchers and catchers can challenge calls throughout the game using an automated tracking system that was instituted this season. Each team is given two wrong calls before they exhaust their challenges. The NBA has had a coach's challenge system since 2019, the NHL since 2015 and the NFL since 1999.
«You're paid to get the plays right. You're paid to get them right,» said Crawford, who still works for the NBA to support officials. «So we train referees and they're very, very good. They're going to make mistakes. They are guys who miss a jump shot. Coach calls a timeout they shouldn't have called. It's all the same thing. We've got to watch. You're at the end of the game. The key is not to blow that whistle and guess. You got to know that it happened. Don't assume that it happened.»
Crawford, who was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday, said on the days he would miss a crucial call, he would agonize over it.
«I love [the challenges]. I initially didn't, but now I just love it because you have to understand at the end of the game if you screw a play up, you're going back to the hotel, dreading it,» he said. «I had a number of those nights.»
Throughout his time as an NBA ref from 1977 to 2016, he was one of the most recognizable and controversial officials in the game. While he always seemed unaffected by those perceptions, they privately bothered him, he said.
«I'd be lying if I said it didn't bother


