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Old Mon Feb 14, 2005, 10:01am
Maverick Maverick is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 57
Quote:
Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Quote:
Originally posted by Maverick
I have been claiming the total opposite. I have been saying that 5-10 has nothing to do with this situation because it wasn't a TIMER'S[\B] (who is a person) mistake, it was a TIMING[\B] (a procedural) mistake. You're the one who keeps claiming it falls under 5-10 by continually citing a case book play that references that rule. I've said from the start that it falls under 2-5-5 where the referee can correct an obvious timing error.
You are partially right, Maverick. A referee can correct a timing error under rule 2.5.5. What you don't seem to understand though is that the referee can now only correct that timing error by using rule 5-10.If you can find anything in the rules that say an official can correct timing errors when they don't know exactly how much time to take on or off the clock, please cite those rules. Feel free to get MTD Sr. to help you too. [/QUOTE]

I agree, you can't correct the time unless you have specific knowledge of what to reset it to. However, the original post said there was 1.94 seconds left when they had the ball out of bounds so we do know specifically what to reset the clock to. Thus, reset the clock to that time and start again.
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