Thread: Eyepoke
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Old Wed Jan 03, 2007, 08:08pm
armymanjones armymanjones is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 69
Quote:
Originally Posted by deecee
In these cases you SHOULD have seen the swipe -- you might not see the contact but the reaction spells it out. Call the foul fix the eye get the ball in play. Never had a complain or problem and the defender always appologizes. Preventative when possible -- and calling a block has nothing to do with this -- either he blocked or took a charge nothing to do with think he moved.

besides we all know he CAN move and that has nothing to do with a block/charge -- armymanjones what DOES have to do with a charge? (or PC foul)
Ok, maybe bad example, but my point being was that you should not call what you don't see. Even if you should have seen it. If you are T and you are watching and counting A1 advancing the ball from backcourt to frontcourt with no pressure frome team B and you momentarily take your eye off the ball handler (I know not proper but it happens) and the B coach yells he double dribbled do you call it although you didn't see it? I'm not trying to over analyse just want to make the point of calling what you see and not what you don't.