| Heat guard Max Strus knocked down a 3-pointer with 11:04 left in 
				the third quarter of their 100-96 loss to the visiting Boston 
				Celtics. It cut the Heat's deficit at the time to 56-54.
 
 But less than three minutes later in game time, the announcement 
				came in saying the NBA's replay center in New Jersey overturned 
				the basket because Strus' left foot was barely touching the 
				sideline, making him out of bounds.
 
 "The fact that it happened, three to four, five minutes in game 
				time, that does change the context of how you're playing," 
				Spoelstra said after the game. "We were starting to gain some 
				momentum. You feel like it's a seven-, eight-point game and you 
				look up and it's a 13-point game, and there's no other 
				explanation for it other than it's gone back to the league 
				offices.
 
 "You feel like if it happens like that, it should happen 
				immediately and you can adjust accordingly."
 
 The longtime Heat coach suggested the NBA will reexamine that 
				decision during future league meetings.
 
 "I'm sure they will look at that, and we'll probably be the case 
				study for it," Spoelstra said. "I'm OK if it happens the way it 
				used to. They would look at it at the next foul or break and 
				look at it and notice it, but it was probably 10 minutes of real 
				time -- somebody check on that.
 
 "I'm not crying or whining. Come on, we got beat. This was two 
				competitive teams going at it. We had a crack at it at the end. 
				Even as uneven as the game seemed, we had a crack at it. Our 
				guys are never going to, like, not think we have a chance at 
				it."
 
 Spoelstra insisted more than once that the call was "not the 
				reason we lost," crediting Boston for taking control early. But 
				the momentum the Heat gained during the third quarter was 
				slashed when they had to watch their score drop by three.
 
 "That was so unusual for us to be grinding and then start to get 
				some momentum, and then it was like, oh, hey, by the way, take 
				away that 3, with no explanation," Spoelstra said. "That's the 
				human side of it. That's not the complaining side of it. Who 
				knows if that would have changed anything, anyway."
 
 --Field Level Media
 
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