Quote:
Originally Posted by summdawg76
That is your opinion sir. You know what I was talking about. I was just stating how to use good game management skills. There is nothing poor about it. If you have a girls middle school game and their only dribbler is fouled out for some nit picking calls, your game will go to hell. ' You can say what you want, but a game is not much a game without some kind of rhythm or flow. So if you can use some preventive officiating by talking to players, the game flows smoother.
The same principle goes for the game "knucklehead." Every game has one a
nd as soon as you can get rid of him/her, the game cleans up.
I am so sorry that your having to explain yourself again on this opinion, but I just have recently joined. I am enjoying the good conversations.
Merry Christmas
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Your reply was not directed at me but I will follow up my first response with this. The bolded part is of no concern to me...if it goes to hell, it goes to hell....I have my own team that I coach when not officiating and my job as official is not to adjust calls for the better players so the game doesn't go to hell.
We seem to have two discussions going. One is nit picky fouls and the other is who you are calling them on.
There is no provision in the rulebook that protects the best dribbler (or any other best skill set player you want to put out here) on a team. Why would that even come into consideration by an official to call or not to call a violation is simply silly and shows you have a biasedness toward one team or player. Cardinal sin as an official.
If you foul the player out it more than likely has something to do with contact that He or She is creating, causing you to blow the whistle.
Weather or not it's nit picky is soley up to the officials on the court who are charged with putting air in the whistle.