No. There should be no judgment involved. A foul is a foul is a foul. If the whistle goes in the pocket for the last minute, then it goes in for both teams. Gordon thwacked Pruitt. So, I ask you, did Pruitt foul White? (I do disagree with the call on Ellis at the end of regulation. That was a crappy call.) In fact, I'd say that Gordon's foul was quite smart since Illinois shoots free throws about as well as my dead great-grandmother. Pruitt, on the other hand, stupidly hacked DJ White when there was about zero chance of him making the shot. That's a dumb foul and if Illinois isn't at home, that probably gets called. You won't get any argument that it was a colossally stupid play by Pruitt. Seriously? We need to get a hand in the face of a center as he shoots from 3/4 court??? I'd be fine if things were called strictly to the letter of the law, but you know that's not how things are done. The new rule seems to be if it had an adverse effect, you blow the whistle, otherwise you don't. In the game we lost to Arizona earlier in the year, Arizona got the ball tied with about 1 second left at around 3/4 court and called a timeout they didn't have. The ref ignored the timeout and let the clock run out. I wasn't on here pissing and moaning about it cause come on, it didn't have any effect on how that last second was played so why end it like that. In the same manner, DJ White was not hitting a 75 foot heave, so why end it like that? It's the way things are called now, and have been for the past 10 years. To expect that call is ridiculous. I seem to recall a technical called against Webber a while back for calling a time out when Michigan didn't have one... in a rather important game, too. I think Illini fans have a right to be pissed that the refs ignored that call. I've seen ridiculous things called (and not called) at the end of games. I see a TON of awful hacking going on, and it's rarely called... except, then, sometimes it is called. And then sometimes awful calls are made (which generally benefit the home team or Duke). Ellis, for example, got hit with a relatively ticky-tack call at the end of regulation, and then Gordon was called for a fair foul at the end of OT. White gets the rebound and, yes, it was a heave, but Pruitt stupidly grabbed him and interfered with White's ability to get his shot off. That was a foul. I don't really care whether or not it gets called, as a single example. I care about consistent application of the game's rules. If you call Ellis and then Gordon, you have to call Pruitt. It was stupidly obvious, and it was a bad no-call. If you're making foul calls with under 10 seconds left like that, you need to make it both ways. Hell... Pruitt wasn't far short of tackling White.