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Old Mon Oct 24, 2005, 11:01pm
David B David B is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Mississippi
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the interpretation seems pretty clear

Quote:
Originally posted by ChuckElias
I'm bumping this from a few weeks ago b/c I have to teach lag time this week. So I'm still looking for a "bottom line" way to teach it.

Can we always put back exactly what we saw b/c of having definite knowledge? If not, how do we differentiate?

I hate the difference between seeing the clock as the whistle blows vs looking up after blowing the whistle. If I blow first and then look right away, do I have to assume that a second has already run off?

I would just like a simple answer to give to the new applicants.
Maybe its just my reading, but the FED interpretations seems pretty clear to me:

COMMENT: By interpretation, “lag or reaction” time is limited to one second when the official’s signal is heard and/or seen clearly. The rules do not permit the referee to correct situations resulting in normal reaction time of the timer which results in a “lag” in stopping the clock. Additional time which may subsequently run off the clock (after the one second lag time) is considered a timing mistake and may be corrected. (5-10-1)

When the official sees the time immediately, the scorer is still allowed a second (in the example he saw 55 but 54 was okay)

When the official sees the time and "more than one second is run off the clock" then its considered a mistake and he should correct it back to what he saw (in the example 55)

Seems kind of strange, but I guess the timer gets the benefit of the doubt while the official must go with what he sees.

But that also seems pretty clear to me.

Good luck explaining...

Thanks
David
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