The league plans to expand their last-two-minute report criteria starting with this year's NBA playoffs, in order to “bring additional transparency” to their officiating program, the league announced on Friday.

The L2M report is called upon for all calls and non-calls in the final two minutes of fourth quarter or overtime periods, given that the teams were within five points of each other by the two-minute mark.

The new criteria would involve all games within three points at any stage of the last two minutes of a fourth quarter or overtime. So if a team had a 10-point lead with two minutes left on the clock, but the deficit was eventually closed to three at some point during those last two minutes, a report would be issued anyway.

NBA officials' overall accuracy on foul calls is listed at 98 percent in games through April 5, with that percentage dropping to 91.3 during the last two minutes of a game.

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In January, Vice President of Basketball Operations, Kiki Vandeweghe hinted the possibility of full-game reports coming in the future. The 2016-17 season marks the second full campaign in which L2M reports have been issued.

These reports have received plenty of criticism from players, coaches, and referees, all claiming that it does nothing for the game itself other than throwing officials under the bus.