Quote:
Originally Posted by tomegun
Another example: while team A is in control of the ball A1 passes the ball to A2. While the pass is in the air A3 requests timeout.
After hearing some opinions, I will come back and tell everyone how this conversation went.
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I would assume this should be a short conversation. Wait until A2 catches the ball, make sure A3 still wants the TO, then grant it. Otherwise, you have an accidental whistle situation, and you don't want to get me started on that...

In fact, wasn't this a POE last year?
I agree with Smitty that full association meetings might be a bad time to try and discuss off-the-wall items. But they can be useful to have leadership mention various specific plays, how they've seen them called, and how they should be called to have members be more consistent. Small groups are great for discussion, but what if you guys decide, in your example above, to just grant the TO to A anyway even if the pass is in the air, because, what the hell, they deserve it. How does that help consistency over the entire association?