Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
Perhaps you have A1 hooking B1 with their elbow while, at about the same time, B1 contacts A1 by sticking their knee out....a PC foul and a block....but not a charge and a block. One official sees the hook, one sees the knee. Two independent actions...decide which came first.
B1 has obtains LGP position when A1 crashes into B1. However, B1 swats at the ball and smacks A1 on the face/arm/etc. You have a charge/PC and illegal use of hands. Again, two different actions...not a block/charge. Decide which came first.
So yes, if it is not a block vs. charge decision, the rules don't obligate the officials to a double foul. When you have the double whistle with both having shown their signals, the officials are going to be talking anyway and it should become clear that one wasn't calling a block/charge.
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I understand all this. But according to most, the whole deal hinges on the conflicting signals. So, according to this logic, in this case, where
it is possible that both fouls occurred at the same time, we are not obligated to report a double foul. But, in the case of a block/charge, where i
t is not possible for both to occur at the same time, we are obligated to report a double foul.
Seems
really odd to me.