Quote:
Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee
Both situations are caused by a timer failing to start the clock properly. In both cases also, an official wants to put back up an inaccurate time that he happened to see when he blew his whistle. The last one might be an extreme case, but both situations sureasheck are similar.
The ridiculous part is your failure to understand the concept.
And, as I said, I'm repeating myself. Everybody else carry on.
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There is absolutely
NOTHING in the OP to suggest the clock
DID NOT start properly. That is an assumption on your part.
The fact is with a clock that doesn't show tenths, the clock can run without any visual evidence to the fact. So as an official, I'm trusting my fellow officials version of what happened and chalking this up to a bang-bang play that had a timing error caused by human reflexes...not being able to start and stop the clock quick enough...and going with the
RULES that an official was viewing the clock at the whistle and saw a second, IOW
DEFINITE KNOWLEDGE.
So it would probably be a good thing to stop repeating yourself, since you keep repeating complete BS.