Well, true. We gave him much too good of a look, so our strategy in my mind failed, even though he missed. In theory you'd like to think we could defend the 3 with a small line-up better than getting a rebound, but the proof is in the videotape and that ball was a whisker from going in.
The hard part about making the decision with 10 seconds left is that if your strategy is to get a defensive rebound to win, you need to feel like you have some guys on the floor who can rebound. We probably would have had Neils and 6-1 RJ Evans on the low block (the other option is a cold and inexperienced Nolan). If we foul and Batts shoves one of those guys under the basket and gets an easy put back (in addition to no rebounding left, we had nobody left who could contest a shot if they got the board), the second guessing comes out about why you would foul with no frontcourt left.
We did get the one before that (Omar), but PC wasn't trying to miss and Batts was on the bench for some reason (coaching blunder by Cooley).