Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam
Here are my questions:
Are you counting ten seconds just as quickly on free throws as you do in the backcourt?
Are you calling a three second violation every time three seconds elapses with a player not getting both feet on the floor completely outside of the lane?
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Remember...I said the supervisor/assignor steps in and gives the association its marching orders. If, in the situation presented in the OP, they tell me don't call it, I won't. I have my principles but chief among them is keep working.
That being said...I'd never say there aren't gray areas acknowledged with some rules but I can't see any of my assignors telling us to ignore a kid stepping on the FT line after the ball is at his/her disposal. No call there has an immediate effect on whether a team scores. Additionally, it falls into the "Stevie Wonder in the cheap seats" category: Everyone sees it. I would hope an assignor/supervisor wouldn't even tell an official "just have the kid back up." I'm not saying that if I'm aware of it before the game I won't talk to the player but that's as far as I'll go. He/she can't figure it out once the game starts? That's life.
Think about it: I give A1 the ball, he/she purposely steps on the FT line, I call a violation...and
I did something wrong? What is someone going to tell me? 'Yeah, he/she violated, but..." But what?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nevadaref
The real problem is actually when the assignors don't back the officials who make calls which are fully supported by the rules and worse yet when they actively advocate not following the rules during games and do such themselves when officiating.
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I'll give you that. I consider myself lucky. My assignors all tell us if the rules back us they'll support us and I haven't run into any problems in that regard. If there's something they don't want us to do, they let us know.