NBA defends 11% rise in foul calls during playoffs…

Wemby gets ejected for elbowing Naz Reid above the neck (1:28)Wemby gets ejected for elbowing Naz Reid above the neck (1:28)

ESPN News ServicesMultiple AuthorsMay 13, 2026, 01:30 PM ET

Mindful of criticism from players and coaches, NBA senior vice president of referee development and training Monty McCutchen acknowledges there is a difference between the regular season and the playoffs, but he said refereeing doesn’t fundamentally change in the postseason.

Playoff referees study tape after games, just as they do in the regular season. Every call is evaluated, and McCutchen has said several times in recent years that the league’s referee corps is constantly striving to do better.

Given the stakes of the postseason, it’s only natural for every play to come under more scrutiny and for emotions to run hotter.

The NBA is seeing an increase in foul calls from the regular season to the playoffs for the 66th time in its 80-year history. This season is seeing a differential of higher than 10% in that regard for only the sixth time in the last 60 years. The five biggest increases — from 13% to 17% — all took place between 1949 and 1955.

One recent example of that passion boiling over was the ejection of San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama after he elbowed Minnesota’s Naz Reid. Spurs coach Mitch Johnson defended his 7-foot-4 star, saying he’s constantly dealing with situations where other teams go over the line by “trying to impose their physicality on him” and inevitably force him to react.

“We don’t like to see ejections,” McCutchen said. “Our goal would be to get through all these games where we meet this right up to the edge of rough and you have this really aggressive, passionate game that is adjudicated and an environment is created in which that environment of aggressiveness is rewarded — because we have the best players in any sport, in my opinion — but that it doesn’t creep over to rough. That’s the goal.”

“It would be very difficult on our players, on our coaches, most certainly on our referees, if the intensity of a seven-game series that we see in the playoffs exhibited itself over 82 games,” McCutchen said at the NBA draft combine. “NBA playoff basketball is one of the great spectacles of all sport in my opinion. You get the combination of the passion and strength of our players and coaching staffs in tight spaces over seven-game series. And I think that that absolutely makes for a different game.”

Wemby gets ejected for elbowing Naz Reid above the neck (1:28)Wemby gets ejected for elbowing Naz Reid above the neck (1:28)

McCutchen looks at the playoffs this way: Aggression is good, but rough is not.

Wemby gets ejected for elbowing Naz Reid above the neck (1:28)

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