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Anti-Hack-a-Shaq Rule Apparently Not Coming

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Dear Shaq: You’re on your own in this one. Sincerely, David Stern.

The NBA commissioner, who had suggested he might ask the league’s competition committee to change the rules to discourage intentional fouling--as in Game 2 of this series when Indiana Pacer Coach Larry Bird put Shaquille O’Neal on the free-throw line 39 times--reversed himself and said Monday that things will stay the way they are.

“We like the rule changes [now in effect],” Stern said during his annual news conference at the NBA finals. “We’re not planning to rush out and enact some Hack-a-Shaq antidote.”

Said Deputy Commissioner Russ Granik: “I think our feeling is that we’ve had a couple of games--I guess in the Portland series and the one in this series, where there was a lot of deliberate fouling. But our feeling is that that’s a strategy the two teams [the Pacers and Portland Trail Blazers] employed, I think, at least thus far, without great success

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“When we met last week with the competition committee and with the coaches, there was absolutely no discussion of the subject. There really was no interest.”

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