Quote:
Originally posted by David B
Quote:
Originally posted by BBall_Junkie
I don't think so. I watched all 1,207 of the replays and that is what I saw and i have it on tivo so i gave myself an extra couple of looks. The contact to the face definitly happened first. Now was it an arm bar and enough to consider an offensive foul, in my opinion yes. However, some may say no and I can respect that as well. My point for bringing it up is that it is a call we don't see often and happens more than we call. I was more or less trying to make a discussion point out of it. Bottom line, a foul happened either by the offensive player or by the defensive. It was not nothing. And I think the crew upon looking at it would say the same. Overall I think they did an excellent job.
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Well the one that I really questioned was at the end when the guy from Duke clearly rebounded the FT (over the back) and then pushed the Md player off and layed it in for the basket.
Coach Williams almost came on the court after that miss.
And agreed, the contest was very physical and there were a lot of non-calls in my opinion that went to Duke toward the end of the game. Call it the home court advantage.
Thanks
David
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Home court advantage??? The officials who work this level don't let home court filter in. Unless someone can prove otherwise these comments are unjustified.
The call you are talking about, in my opinion and view, the duke player outjumped the MD player and beat him to the ball. The fact that the MD player was in front has nothing to do with anything and is not an "over the back" as this is fan speak. He did not PUSH do get the board. Then, he had MD players all over him, and it looked as though he may have pushed them off. But I think the officials passed on the grabs and holds and thus decided it would not be right to call the push on him and ultimately no-called the play. Right or wrong this had nothing to do with home court.