If you want to believe in conspiracies, etc. it's of course your choice. I would point out, however, that once you decide that it's all rigged you really have no basis for discussing the various games because it's all rigged anyway.
That's definitely the extremist viewpoint. One can acknowledge a game or series being "tampered with" without condemning the entire league or sport as fraudulent. You can look at a questionable result in a game that had huge financial ramifications for the NBA -- especially in the context of the 2002 WCF -- and see how the NBA would benefit from forcing a seventh game, and then, with the Kings at home for instance, they still have a chance to win the series. It doesn't necessarily mean that every game is fixed and there's no competition, but it's hard to believe that the NBA is completely clean.
My opinion of this game has changed over the years. I used to believe that it was just horrible, horrible officiating, no fix. Then I started to think that maybe it was a make-up game because Shaq was on the bench for so long in Game 5, but the bad calls didn't start until the fourth quarter. Now, I'm starting to think that it was simple: Get the Lakers to Game 7, one way or the other.
It doesn't help the NBA that they don't acknowledge their mistakes. Rajon Rondo nearly takes Brad Miller's head off in the playoffs last year during one of the best early round series of all time, and the NBA finds some specious way to defend the call. Everyone who looks at the play knows that, based on the way refs call flagrant fouls, that was a flagrant foul. But if you give the Bulls two shots and the ball, it has the potential to nail the game down for them, and it looks like the refs gave them the game. What happened is that the Bulls got screwed, and everyone who follows the NBA knows it. Had David Stern and Stu Jackson gone on TV and acknowledged the bad call, it would have been no big deal. Instead, they decide to defend an obviously wrong call, insulting the intelligence of basketball fans across the country.
Contrast that with the NFL. Mike Pereira, VP of Officiating, goes on NFL Network every week and discusses questionable calls. He breaks them down, explains the rule and the interpretation of the rule, and explains why the call was made. And when there's a bad call, he admits it. So when Ed Hochuli blows it in Week 1 last season and literally costs the Chargers a game, both Pereira and Goodell -- and Hochuli himself -- acknowledge the mistake, apologize for it, and look for ways to fix a flawed rule. They don't cover it up.
The NBA, including David Stern, Stu Jackson, and
all of their officials, have no credibility, primarily because they don't admit even their most obvious mistakes. I don't remember the NBA
ever admitting that a ref made a bad call. Closest thing I can think of is instituting replay after the 2002 playoffs because of a number of shots that were either waived off or called good in error. Fans can handle refs missing calls. They can't handle being lied to about it. It became obvious after the Joey Crawford spectacle a couple years ago that some of these guys are power hungry and ego driven, yet the NBA won't remove any of them. When a player or coach criticizes the officiating, they are slapped with a fine. But Joey Crawford is still an NBA referee.
Now, of course, Donaghy has no credibility either. He was busted for illegal gambling and conspiring with the mob. He's a liar, a cheat, and a criminal. He has no evidence to support any of his claims. He's vindictive, to say the least. But I can't just ignore what he's saying. Number one, it makes sense, when you think about it. These aren't wild, off the wall accusations that fly in the face of reason. I don't think anyone has a hard time believing that Steve Javie hates Allen Iverson. Perhaps some of them are exaggerated (like Bavetta paying an airline employee to recite to him everything that the announcers say about him during a game), but he's not exactly claiming that Danny Crawford is a cross-dressing pedophile.
Number two, when Jose Canseco named names in 2005, everyone associated with baseball turned their noses up at him. "He's crazy", everyone said. And, based on what we know of him, he probably is. But his claims are being proven, one by one. McGwire, Palmeiro, Giambi, Pudge, A-Rod ... all of them used steroids. The Mitchell report comes out and actually supports his assertions. It's a cautionary tale, like the boy who cried wolf. We all hope that he's lying, but our jaws hit the floor when we realize that he wasn't. You can't just ignore him.