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"Everyone has a purpose in life, even if it's only to serve as a bad example." "If Opportunity knocks and he's not home, Opportunity waits..." "Don't you have to be stupid somewhere else?" "Not until 4." "The NCAA created this mess, so let them live with it." (JRutledge) |
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1. What Rut wrote in his second post in this sequence is vastly different from what he said in the first one (quoted above by JetMet). In the first he wrote that he would just give the play to the offense which is in blatant disregard of the rule. His second post is reasonable in stating that the official did not deem (or perhaps did not see) the contact prior to the jump and catch as a rising to the level of a foul (I disagree and believe that it is a clear holding foul, but understand if the Lead couldn't see this from where he was.) and only thought that the body bump after the catch was worthy of a whistle.
2. I don't believe that your understanding of Start/Develop/Finish is accurate. This is exemplary of the problem that occurs when someone comes up with a teaching philosophy which is then perverted by hundreds of camp clinicians across the country. They either fail to properly teach the entire content of the philosophy or alter it to their personal taste, thus ruining it. SDF does not mean to wait and see what happens on a play, only giving a whistle if it is needed. Nor does it mean that marginal contact becomes illegal when it puts one player at a disadvantage. Those are different philosophies of which we can debate the merits in another thread as they are beyond the scope of this post. So what does SDF mean? First and foremost, SDF only applies during a drive to the basket by a ballhandler. The player already has the ball at the "Start" phase. If illegal contact, such as a handcheck or blocking foul, occurs now officials are instructed to whistle this quickly and make the call right away. Next comes the Develop phase in which the ballhandler is moving towards the goal and seems to have an advantageous position on the defender, but has not yet begun the act of shooting. The philosophy is to hold the whistle during this phase unless the contact is severe so as not to negate the better position of the offensive player and benefit the beaten defender as a whistle at this point would deprive the attacker of a quality scoring opportunity and result in either a throw-in or bonus FTs. Finally, we reach the Finish phase. At this point the offensive player is in the act of shooting and any contact which is occuring, whether continuous or continual from the development phase, can be penalized without unfairly depriving the offensive player of the opportunity to score. Officials are taught to whistle either in the Start or Finish phases, but not in the Develop phase. This does not equate to either the wait & see or advantage/disadvantage ways of thinking. |
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You can write an entire dissertation on why you think you are right, that is a shooting foul to me. I have called it a shooting foul in the past, I will continue to do so in the future, and no supervisor I have will tell me I got it wrong.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Good Lord man. We are talking about a philosophic which is referenced by everyone else but you for some strange and odd reason. Every single high level official I have talked to discusses these kinds of things often, but you keep complaining about how someone is not following a rule that you are not in a position to even say with any kind of authority in the first place. You do not work for the NF. You do not work the the NCAA. I wonder have you ever been to a high level camp where maybe one of the guys on the actual game might have actually attended to talk about what they do. I also said there was contact, I did not suggest there was a foul. All contact is not a foul as you should know. And in my opinion the foul did not really occur until it was clear he was shooting. As someone else said, if he could not catch the pass, you might have had a different situation. But to me, when contact starts it might be a foul, but wait to see if they are really disadvantaged. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) Last edited by JRutledge; Tue Feb 02, 2016 at 12:09pm. |
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I've heard so many different ways to handle SDF. I doubt it's exactly anything.
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The SDF philosophy is still in the D phase -- and you are waiting for it to F before it's applied? (and the "you" is generic; not specifically you, Dad) |
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+1. The call made on the video is the expectation. You can quote all the rules/philosophies/etc. that you want but in the end the coaches and assignors at the college level have set an expectation and you (Nevada) are incorrect.
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in OS I trust |
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We've seen that happen in the past several years come conference tournament and NCAA tournament time. |
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Don't the "rules" say that a foul is contact that hinders normal offensive or defensive movement? In that case, the egregious holding "foul" that one member says "must be called" is not a foul, as it obviously did not hinder anyone. The contact on the airborne player who has caught and is shooting the ball DID hinder his normal landing, and so was called a foul. Seems like the correct call to me (for whatever that's worth).
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And I didn't catch the bump until Arem pointed it out. Last edited by BigCat; Tue Feb 02, 2016 at 09:44pm. |
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