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NCAA with replay = different story. In that scenario, the only time you'd be shooting FTs with no time on the clock on this case would be if the foul occurred on an airborne shooter after the expiration of time (assuming the shooter released the try in time). |
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If an official sees a time on the clock, that time can be put back....even if it is just 0.3....and even if it is reaction time. The time it takes for the official to see the clock is the reaction time the timer is allowed. In this case, the official should have looked at the clock to have something to put back. If the foul & whistle happened before the horn, the clock should have stopped. The shot "should" count and time "should" be put back...but the only way to do within the rules that is to look at the clock and see it before it gets to 0 or to have some mental count of the time. And unless you're standing at the opposite side of the parking lot, the speed of sound isn't going to matter. Also, nothing in the rules says the definite knowledge has to have any sort of accuracy.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association Last edited by Camron Rust; Sun Jan 17, 2016 at 07:52pm. |
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It's when I don't observe a time on the clock (in a situation where the foul is pretty much bang-bang with the horn) that I have a problem with just arbitrarily putting a set amount of time back on the clock. No rules support for that, though I know there are nonetheless some supervisors out there that direct it. |
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In all seriousness, I know that this is a case book play but I just cannot seem to find it right now. I will continue looking. |
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For NFHS, if the whistle comes before the horn and an official sees time remaining on the clock, that time can be restored and the try counts. The last part is what Camron is advocating. |
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Lost me here, example? Seems with zero accuracy there's no definite knowledge.
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If the foul happens with 0.7 on the clock and the whistle blows with 0.5, but the official doesn't look until 0.2, then 0.2 is what gets restored by rule. In this case the official is not accurate as he was slow to look either when blowing the whistle or hearing his partner's. However, he does have definite knowledge. |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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