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Originally Posted by bearclause
I'm just referring to kids who emulate what they see their NBA heros get away with. I have been noticing carrying being called more in the NBA recently. The real eye-opener for me was seeing Kobe Bryant get called for a carry. However - I always thought that Michael Jordan in his prime got away with carrying quite often.
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Well I am sure the NBA was not calling the game based on what you thought.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bearclause
OK - I was thinking of several dribbles where the max height is at maybe waist level, followed by one really high dribble where the hand remains reasonably on the top of the ball and never "freezes" near the apex of the dribble. Maybe the dribbler runs forward and the ball also is pushed forward on the downstroke. I know this is something best described by a video clip.
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Yes it is. You have to see it to call it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bearclause
Sure. The 2006 NCAA Women's Volleyball FF sold their entire public allotment in one day and should be filled to their 18K capacity.
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I was being facetious. It is nice that they sold out an 18,000 seat facility. The last time I checked NCAA Men's basketball are played in domes. Those usually have much more than 18,000 seats in them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bearclause
Really though - the rules are in fairly plain English that almost free of obscure wording or technical jargon. It's not like trying to read one of my engineering datasheets. I would have thought someone would be willing to answer a few simple questions that might reduce some of the confusion out there. Frankly I don't care about what happened to this particular player any more - the team won and any violation called didn't affect the outcome. I'm just trying to be more informed about what I pay my money to see.
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The words are one thing, what you see is another issue all together. And having been an official for some time now in differnet sports, officials do not call things based solely on black and white definitions. This is the reason the NCAA and other officiating organizations use tape to illustrate points of view on what should be called and why. Without seeing the plays you are talking about, I am going to trust that the officials have a better knowledge of what took place than you or I in this situation.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bearclause
And just in case I haven't said it - thanks. I've always thought carrying the ball was fairly simple to spot, but apparently not. I appreciate anyone trying to help poor 'ol me understand.
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Of course is it simple when you have not been trained or every put on the striped shirt and whistle in your life. It is quite another to have to make that decision in a split second in live action.
Peace