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Old Mon Apr 08, 2019, 08:12pm
thedewed thedewed is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 199
Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
Recognizing facts is not judgement. It has been used in basketball for a long time with a particular meaning whether you understand that or not. Judgement calls are calls that, when seen, the official has choices to make on whether there is something to call and if it should be called. Judgement calls are adjudicating the grey areas.

A player standing OOB with the ball is a fact. If it isn't called, it isn't due to judgement, it is not recognizing a fact, not seeing it.

This play was also a fact. The player clearly was dribbling, clearly picked the ball up with two hands, and clearly dribbled again. Those are the facts and no one with a brain can honestly say otherwise. There was no judgement needed here. He just missed it.

When a player has a hand on an opponent, you can call a foul or you can not call a foul...that is a judgment call.
Agreed, but they both saw everything they needed to see that w/o question it was a clear double dribble, nothing questionable about it.
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