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Old Wed Jun 27, 2007, 07:08pm
Dan_ref Dan_ref is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee
I'm not saying this. Nor have I ever said this. The NCAA rule book is saying this. I'm just repeating what they say. Specifically, the NCAA is saying this through AR121(a) at R5-7-3. That AR is the exact same play as the original post and it says that you don't put any time back on the clock. NFHS case book play5.6.2SitD is exactly similar also, and the FED says that time doesn't go back on the clock either.

It's NOT a timing mistake. The horn and whistle for the foul were almost simultaneous. Iow, the timer stopped the clock properly at the whistle but the horn still went off. The calling official now has to determine whether the foul occurred before or after the horn, and also has to determine that if the foul occurred first, was the ball still in the shooter's hands when the horn went off. If the official determined that the foul occurred before the horn and the ball was in the shooter's hands at the horn, then NCAA AR121 and NFHS case book play 5.6.2SitD tell you exactly what to do.
Maybe you missed this part of the rule I referenced?

Quote:
A determination, based on the judgment of the official, that a timing mistake has occurred in either starting or stopping the game clock.
AR 121 tells us what to do in the absence of a timing mistake (which is left to the judgement of the officials).

Last edited by Dan_ref; Wed Jun 27, 2007 at 07:10pm.
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