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Old Wed May 01, 2002, 04:14pm
Bart Tyson Bart Tyson is offline
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Join Date: Nov 1999
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Quote:
Originally posted by mick
Quote:
Originally posted by Bart Tyson
Hold on thereeee. Not necessarily. Example 1) A1 gets trapped; coach" TO", A1 throws ball to A2 before the official can blow the whistle. A2 has control, no pressure. I might ask the coach" you still want the TO? coach "No".
example 2) Official has the ball and getting ready for a throwin; coach,"TO", asst. or table say. "coach, you are out of TO's", coach, " I don't want the TO". Ok no problem we continue with the throwin. This is two examples, i sure we can think of more. My point is, just asking for a TO doesn't mean you have to grant it.
Bart,
I would use R5-12-2 Time-outs in excess...may be requested and shall be granted....
By which rule would you not grant the time-out?
If Coach wants one. He's getting it. I will not be his assistant.
mick

Mick, Obviously there's no rule for the "not grant". I certainly don't have a problem with granting the TO in my 1st example. Now, I ask you, are you going to grant the TO in my 2nd example?
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