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Old Thu Apr 15, 2004, 09:13am
Dan_ref Dan_ref is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nevadaref
Quote:
Originally posted by Dan_ref
Quote:
Originally posted by Nevadaref


2. While I always know whether the player can run the end line or not, I only tell them if they ask me. I believe that it is the coach's job to teach their players the rules of the game, not mine. I just make the calls.

If you're coming out of a dead ball situaton, especially a time out, this is very bad advice. Verbally tell the player and strongly signal either spot or endline.
Dan, If you can find something in the mechanics manual that instructs the official to do this, then I will happily do so, but in the absence of that I believe that you are unfairly helping the inbounding team. It is the coach's job to instruct his team on these type of tactics, not the official's.
I can agree with giving a signal for designating the spot, as that is clearly one of our duties, but not much else.
I frankly don't care whether you do it or not.

What I care about is if *I* don't do it my schedule will suffer.

BTW, the coach's post explains well why we do this. Communicaton.

[Edited by Dan_ref on Apr 15th, 2004 at 10:41 AM]
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