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Only if your daughter plays for the team being fouled.
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No, and no, but white #32 is a defensive liability due to her lack of body control.
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Curious why you asked if they should be flagrant and not intentional.
First play was kinda almost maybe a block. Think first contact is ball and most of the impact is probably from the offensive player jumping up. Second I'm not seeing very well, but the defense just jumps at a stupid time and makes the best of the situation by swiping at the ball. I'd be hard pressed to call an intentional on either of these stand alone plays. |
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I could see either of these as intentional based on excessive/WIF contact. Sure it's clumsy and perhaps not deliberate but those are not our criteria. |
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#2: Wind up by fouler would give me pause to at least consider an IF based on the context of the game. Sent from my SPH-L900 using Tapatalk |
When In Rome ...
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#1- Depending on how the game has gone this might be a no call as the defender hit ball first then body, making the contact incidental. It was not even a hard foul. Seemed to be just some bad basketball.
#2- This one is a foul no question about that. It is however only a block. No need to think twice about it. Not even necessary to have a conversation about it, yes it is a hard foul but the was nothing excessive or malicious about this foul. On another note, what is the deal with the mechanics. I did not see any preliminary signals on either foul and did not see any communication on the double whistle. How does anyone know that there was not a multiple foul or which defender the foul was being called on? |
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Why not is that not required by NFHS in the mechanics manual. It is possible that its not but living in Arizona we are required to give a prelim. |
Prelims, though technically required in the manual, are inherently a local preference, or sometimes a preference of the individual official when he/she feels some "on-the-spot" information is advisable.
See how many preliminary signals you see when watching NCAA BB on TV. You don't see too many. Likewise in HS, you won't see too many unless locally expected. When I worked in KS, the state coordinator wanted them, so we used them. Sounds like that's the case in AZ as well. But I would say in most places they are not strictly mandated. |
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Peace |
We are required to give a preliminary signal at the spot of the foul. I'm so used to it now I don't even think about it. The only one I really don't like doing is the "hit" signal (I think it's illegal use of the hands). It just feels awkward doing it at the spot of the foul, but I do what I'm told.
The problem with NFHS signals is that there are several fouls that I think are hard to convey with their limited signal chart. I wish we were given more freedom to signal but I can see why they don't want officials making up their own stuff on their own. |
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