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Old Wed Jan 18, 2012, 01:30pm
JugglingReferee JugglingReferee is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rufus View Post
Had a situation during a private school VB contest last night, two-man crew. A1 is driving on a fast break, B2 is ahead of A1 and turns to try and establish LGP. My focus shifts to him because I want to know when/if he establishes.

A1 jumps for a try just below the free throw line extended and plows into B2. Because I was concentrating on B2 I knew he hadn't established LGP before A1 got airborne on the try so I called a block.

Here's the question - A1's take off was high in the key. B2 attempted to establish LGP low in the post. There's quite a bit of distance between them so, if I'm refereeing the defense, what can/should you do to be certain of what A1 did, and when, in terms of beginning the habitual shooting motion? I knew/saw in this case that A1 was airborne before B2 got established, but in thinking about it afterward I realized it was more happenstance than conscious thought/awareness and that kind of bugged me.

On a related note I'm starting to understand/appreciate the no-charge arcs in the NBA/NCAA.
The habitual shooting motion is not the same as becoming airborne. So if your only judgement is what came first: establishing LGP and becoming airborne, if stationary, try to position yourself so that your neck doesn't need to twist too much when looking at both, and if transition, observe the airborne status peripherally while concentrating on the defender.
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