View Single Post
  #5 (permalink)  
Old Fri Nov 02, 2007, 04:16pm
jer166 jer166 is offline
Official Forum Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 82
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Durkee
At the start of the second half, the teams play in the wrong direction. None of the officials, players, or coaches recognize the problem. After a couple of minutes elapse and teams make a couple of goals, somebody informs the players on Team A that they are going the wrong way. A1, who is near the goal that should be have been hers had the teams played the correct direction, tosses that ball into that basket. The officials now stop play.

Rule 4-5-4 implies that the last goal scored by A1 should be counted for team B. Does that sound correct?
The rule states ...when discovered, all points scored, fouls committed, and time consumed shall count as if each team had gone the proper direction. The official discovered the error when he stopped play and after the goal was scored. IMO the goal counts.

However, if the official recognized the error and was in the process of stopping play before the goal was scoredthe goal does not count.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Durkee
Second, if an official hears the person inform team A players they are going the wrong way, should he/she stop the game to prevent A1 from throwing the ball into the "wrong goal"? Or, should the official allow the player to finish the play before stopping the game?
IMO, the official should stop the play as soon as he knows the teams are going the wrong way. However, if a player had a wide-open opportunity to score at his basket, I would hold my whistle until after the play. I can't see any valid reason to withhold the whistle in the OP and allow a player to score at the opponent's goal.
__________________
Los Angeles Ca
"You can fool some of the people all of the time, all the people some of the time, but not all the people all of the time." - Abraham Lincoln
Reply With Quote