Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac
... find it odd that the NFHS and the NCAA ended up 180 degrees apart on this issue. I thought the purpose of doing away with the "punch" was to keep it from being confused with "count the basket".
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge
The NCAA does not care what the NF does.
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I don't care if they don't talk to each other, but I do care about the rationale.
Who was it that originally believed that the "punch" could be confused with "count the basket"?
From my reading of Forum threads over the past few years, I thought that it was the NCAA that was originally worried about such confusion, yet they, unlike the NFHS, decided not to act on it.
That's what confused me (if my facts are straight).
Or maybe signal confusion has absolutely nothing to do with the recent NFHS signal change?
The official signals were also modified to use the same hand signal for a player control foul and a team control foul. Officials should use Signal 36, which is a hand placed at the back of the head, for both types of fouls. Previously, a team control foul was communicated with a punch of the hand. “It is redundant to have different signals to communicate that a foul will be charged to a member of the team in control of the ball,” Wynns said. “Officials don’t understand the need to differentiate between a player control foul and a team control foul, and many game participants, table personnel and fans don’t know the difference.” The committee reviewed various changes that had been both made and requested at a variety of levels of basketball and determined that all player and team control fouls should utilize signal 36 (the hand behind the head) rather than the previous mechanics that utilized Signal 37 (the extended fist) for a team control foul. The proper sequence for either of these calls will now be signal 4 to indicate a foul, the use of the same arm to give signal 36 to indicate a player or team control foul, followed by signal 6 indicating the direction in which the ball will be put in play and then signal 7 to indicate the throw-in spot.
And maybe the NCAA figured that any slight possibility of signal confusion didn't warrant a signal change?