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BOSTON —  Bo Ryan was speaking in measured, calm tones on Thursday night after his Wisconsin team had come up just short against top-seeded Syracuse in the East Region semifinals at TD Garden.

He’s been coaching too long and been through too many games to take a wild verbal swing at anyone, even after one of the most difficult losses of his career.

But he couldn’t resist one not-so-subtle shot.

“I thought we played a great game defensively,” he said. “A really great game. I know not everyone on the floor agreed with me on that, but that’s what I thought.”

The people on the floor he was referencing wore stripes. Coaches talk all the time about wanting their players to get to “50-50 balls.” Ryan clearly believed his team hadn’t gotten many 50-50 calls.

Whether he’s right really doesn’t matter because the game was ultimately decided by a brilliant defensive stand on the final possession by Syracuse, which allowed the Orange to escape with a 64-63 victory and a date with second-seeded Ohio State in the region final tonight.

But Ryan’s frustr1ation fits in with a bubbling sense among those in college basketball that officiating in the NCAA Tournament has been less-than-perfect this season. It came up in Boston on Thursday night and it came up in Phoenix, where the three officials working the Michigan State-Louisville game sent Louisville’s Gorgui Dieng to the free-throw line for a one-and-one when Chris Behanan had been fouled. After Dieng missed the first free throw, standby official Chris Rastetter got the attention of his partners and pointed out the mistake. Because it was a correctable error, Dieng’s miss was wiped out and Behanan went to the line and made both shots.

All of that came a week after Ed Corbett, one of the game’s most respected officials, missed a critical out-of-bounds call in the final minute of Syracuse’s tournament opener against UNC Asheville, denying the Bulldogs the ball trailing by three. Has the officiating gotten worse, or has the scrutiny received by officials ratcheted up?

“I think there’s a lot more scrutiny,” former Maryland coach Gary Williams said. “But I also think you have a right to expect guys to be at their best during the NCAA Tournament. You want the players rested and ready to play. You should expect the same from the officials.”

Which raises a critical point that has been an ongoing issue for years: Are top officials working too much?

Yes, according to John Adams, the NCAA’s supervisor of officials.

“In an ideal world, I’d like to see the top guys work no more than 72 games in the regular season,” Adams said Friday. “That would be four games a week for 18 weeks. The problem is the top guys are working between 90 and 100 games a year right now. If you take, say, 20 games away from them when they’re making about $2,000 a game after expenses, that’s about $40,000.”

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