Jacyn Goble was standing right next to the play last night on the "flop" that the league has gone on to admit the next day was a missed call that benefited Jayson Tatum and the Celtics in a close call where the point swing potentially could have directly impacted the outcome of the game.
Jacyn Goble was also the referee standing right underneath the basket in plain view of the infamous "Sleepness Nights" incident from last season with LeBron James. Again, a blatant no-call benefited Jayson Tatum and the Celtics in call that could have directly impacted the result of the game.
In both cases, not only were the calls blown, but a technical foul was assessed to the opposing team directly after, doubling down on the mistake and further cementing the outcome incorrectly in favor of the Celtics.
People are going to want to fact check, so here are the game pages confirming that Jacyn Goble was indeed the referee present in both games.
I have two theories:
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Jacyn Goble sympathizes with a fellow member of the "weird spelling of Jason" club and gives him preferential treatment.
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Jacyn Goble can't actually see Jayson Tatum and therefore is unable to calls fouls on him.
Eric Lewis, the referee who defended Goble by calling a technical on the Lakers after the missed call was involved in the notorious social media scandal last season that resulted in his dismissal as a referee.
Ben Taylor, the referee who called the flopping technical on Brunson, made the headlines last season after being called out by name by Fred Vanvleet after a Raptors game that seems to have resulted in a demotion. The aforementioned Eric Lewis was also present in that game.
When you count up every team's whiffs throughout history you realize that none of this shit is a science.
The dilemma Warriors fans are facing is that when you try to attribute whiffing on Wiseman, Kuminga, and Moody as simply bad luck, you also have to start to admit that hitting on Steph, Klay, and Draymond was hugely a biproduct of good luck.