Add The New York Post on Google Coach Chris DeMarco didn’t take the bait.
Asked about the officiating after the Liberty’s 88-77 loss to the Wings Tuesday, DeMarco said the referees “were awesome” and followed it up with a smirk.
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The Liberty didn’t lose the game because of officiating.
In the second quarter, the Liberty were outscored 29-11, with seven of their points coming from the free-throw line. During that stretch, they shot an abysmal 2-for-15 from the field (13.1 percent), including 0-for-5 from deep, and trailed by 16 at halftime.
The Liberty trimmed the Wings’ lead to single digits multiple times in the second half, but never could pull back in front.
After the loss, one of the biggest issues plaguing this league took center stage: officiating.
The Liberty were on the wrong end of a few tough calls late.
In one instance, Jessica Shepard appeared to elbow Rebecca Allen in the nose near the baseline as the ball dropped out of bounds.
Sabrina Ionescu asks to challenge a call during the Liberty’ 88-77 loss to the Wings on July 7, 2026 at Barclays Center. AP The Wings maintained possession, and Allen left the game with an apparent nose injury.
Sabrina Ionescu said “it’s tough” to continue playing when it feels like fouls on one end of the floor aren’t called on the other.
“All everyone’s asking for is consistency one way or another, whether they’re going to call it, whether they’re not,” Ionescu said. “You got to call it evenly on both sides, and I think tonight you were kind of able to see how difficult it is when things are being called one way … and then a different way the other way.”
Ionescu believes flopping is a bigger issue now “than it’s ever been before.”
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“Sometimes I think teams that don’t sell it as much don’t get rewarded,” Ionescu said. “And I think that’s just a tough way to play because you want to continue to play basketball at a really high level and not have to change the way you play because of the officiating and because of what’s being called. … I think that’s something that needs to continue to be a point of emphasis is we can’t let the game get to that.”
Ionescu said she understands fixes to officiating are a “work in progress” and acknowledged the Liberty didn’t lose Tuesday purely because of officiating.
“We’re never going to point the finger at it, at it being the refs or one thing or another,” she said, “because obviously that’s not something that we can control, but it’s something that we know is going to improve.”