The bottom line is that we have two distinct groupings of witnessed sounds credited as gunshots. Not three or more, but two. We have from physical evidence both shots and strikes to the door that must be accounted for. We have testimony that at least one bat strike occurred post shooting, and the logical conclusion rightly drawn by the state witness from that is that all of them occurred post shooting, despite concessions about what is theoretically possible due to lack of evidence either way.
Battling pathologists happen in every trial. The evidence is by nature reconstructed and somewhat subjective and that is why both sides can virtually always find people to lend some support to their versions. If Reeva can't have been screaming after the first set of sounds as reason and the evidence suggests to some here then pathologist testimony is of interest but unlikely to be more definitive than that.
use of the word 'shot', versus the word 'bang' and just looking at witnesses, the first set of bangs, and the second set of bangs. it is the middle of the night. witness wakes up, hears loud bangs. when writing up notes as a witness, is it more likely you would attribute the loud bangs to:
[a] gunshots
[a fairly common event associated with loud bangs]
[you also most likely have the information that the incident in question involved gunshots]
the sounds of cricket bat hitting a door.
[a very rare event associated with loud bangs in the early hours]
cricket bat sounds have been shown to sound somewhat like gunshots. and as the bangs are in two sets - minutes apart - the witnesses do not have a side by side comparison to determine any difference.
........
bat>blood curdling screaming>gunshots>quiet>removal of wooden door panels.