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Old Tue Mar 13, 2007, 03:36pm
JoeTheRef JoeTheRef is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 477
Quote:
Originally Posted by Old School
I already answered that Daryl. If you have read all the way to this point, you should certainly understand why I choose not to enforce the T. What authority can I attribute it too? My authority as the official for the game. It is my judgment, I reason it to be an emotional knee-jerk reaction from the coach and not meant as an attack on my integrity.

When the book talks about judgment and balance of fair play, and it also talks about its important to understand the intent and purpose of a rule so that it may be intelligently applied and/or called by the official. Most of the people out here say it's intelligent to immedately give the coach a T. I think I am the only one here that thinks it's intelligent to walk away so that I can not hear the coaches comment. Preventive officiating. To me, the integrity of a good game that I just got to work means more to me than the coaches kneejerk comments about his hurt player. To me, if these words upset you that much that you would enforce the T in a one-point game with 24 seconds left on the clock, imo, you are not ready to officiate upper level basketball. Maybe this field is not for you. Maybe you just don't have what it takes to succeed at this because I'm here to tell you, it gets much worse than that!
OS, I'm sure there are going to be somebody if not many who will breakdown and comment on every sentence in your post, but I'm one to agree with you and your philosophy in this situation.