NBA Although the Bulls lost the protest, the dispute became the backbone for the time requirements of the new rule. Teams with the possession of the ball with less than 00.3 left also have the option of trying a Hail Mary shot like the one that the Knicks were going to try before Tucker's shot, or to simply let the clock run to zero. At the start of the 1989–90 season, the NBA had adopted a rule from FIBA making game clocks register tenths of seconds in the final minute of a period. Madison Square Garden, like the majority of NBA venues at the time, used an
American Sign & Indicator scoreboard and timing system. During the first weeks of the season, it was evident the manufacturer's scoreboards would have frequent calibration flaws with tenths in the final minute. In some cases, the clock would be very inconsistent in timing tenths, while in other cases after calibration, the clock would actually "freeze" at one-tenth of a second before the "00.0" appeared, triggering the final horn. Further changes in 1991 were designed to eliminate the problem with the AS&I units with a new directive for 1991–92 to add shot clocks with duplicate game time. At that point, most venues purchased new scoreboards from
White Way Sign,
Fair-Play, or
Daktronics, because of the calibration consistency of the new units. Very few NBA teams purchased the AS&I (or later,
Trans-Lux) units when the new rule was adopted in 1991. The last NBA arena to use the manufacturer's unit was the
Charlotte Coliseum, which installed a successor Trans-Lux unit for the 2001–02 season (the
Hornets' last in Charlotte, but the arena closed after the 2004–05 season, the
Bobcats' inaugural season, after its replacement,
the Spectrum Center, opened (with a new Daktronics unit). By 2011, all NBA venues used either a Daktronics or
OES system. In 2002, the NBA instituted new rules regarding the end of period indicators. An
LED light strip on the backboard and the scorer's table replaced the traditional electric red light behind the backboard, and a shot clock visible to all three viewable sides was mandated. Venues using Daktronics units installed new four-sided shot clocks with red indicator lights on the sides of the shot time to further assist the electric light. By 2004, shot clocks were available with a perimeter light strip around the clock that also lit up when the clock read "00.0". Today, see-through shot clock units have light strips that surround the shot clock to turn on upon the clock registering 0.0. In the late 1990s, NBA timekeeping rules changed with the implementation of a system where the blowing of an official's whistle stops the clock at the instant of the whistle, along with a rule change where the on-court official (not an official at the scorer's table) starts the clock by pressing a button attached to the official's belt. On December 20, 2006,
New York Knicks forward
David Lee scored a game-winning basket with only 0.1 left on the clock. The shot counted because Lee deflected in the inbounds pass into the basket (just like what was foreseen by the Knicks and Bulls in their game years before). This was the first occurrence of a team winning an NBA game with 0.1 left since Trent Tucker, and coincidentally from the same team. Also by chance,
Michael Jordan,
Charles Oakley and
Patrick Ewing—all of whom participated in the original Trent Tucker game—were in attendance at the David Lee game in Madison Square Garden. The NBA in 2016 adopted an official timekeeper sponsorship with
Tissot, which had the aim of unifying all game timekeeping tasks, with the official clock connected to the scoreboard system and shot clocks all being manufactured by the company. All NBA venues since now utilize identical Tissot timekeeping systems.
Other organizations When the
WNBA was established in 1997, the Trent Tucker rule was adopted. In 2004, FIBA adopted a rule where the system would be mandatory in international competitions.
3x3 basketball also has the Trent Tucker rule. ==See also==