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Point Direction after Made Basket
Why do D1 officials (the Lead) point in opposite direction (towards opposite end line) after a team makes a basket? Must be a college mechanic, but what does it mean? Thanks.
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No, it is not a college mechanic. Just something I think officials have been doing based on their experience. There used to be a time where you signaled how many points they team scored. I think that is what some do on some level.
Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Yes, there was some mechanic a long time ago where the new trail indicated the shot counted. Some still do it. Old habits are hard to kill.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Bingo. Me too. I do it in high school as well because it's habit now. Yes, I know that is wrong.
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Not criticizing you for doing it, but what was the logic behind needing to signal the shot clock operator that possession had changed? The only thing I can think of is that the mechanic was intended to signal the shot clock operator to start the clock.
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My job is a decision-making job, and as a result, I make a lot of decisions." --George W. Bush |
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Maybe it's just me, but I seem to only see it after a play at the basket with some contact, but no foul. They point as a way to say "yes I saw the contact, no it's not a foul"
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Isn't that sort of obvious on a made basket?
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Should be, but some shot clock operators need the extra signal to help them remember to click the reset button following the throw-in.
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Quote:
However, the bigger problem I have with shot clock operators is when they reset the shot clock when they shouldn't. For example, a momentary loss of player control, but Team B never gains control. When a Team A player regains control, I hate looking back up at the clock and seeing they have reset it. |
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Do they still teach this? NCAAM or NCAAW or both? It's never come up in any of the camps I've been to. We do start it in the last minute of the game, of course -- and maybe some just carry that throughout. |
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Just recently go a memo from an assignor telling us to NOT do this mechanic.
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Chaos isn't a pit. Chaos is a ladder. Many who try to climb it fail and never get to try again. The fall breaks them. And some, given a chance to climb, they refuse. They cling to the realm, or the gods, or love. Illusions. Only the ladder is real. The climb is all there is. |
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I tell them I'd rather them be late and wait to see us give the swirl signal than to reset it too early, but that doesn't stop the problem from happening... |
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In NCAAM the "finger swirl" during a live ball is an indicator to the bookkeeper to note the time so we can review during the next media TO whether we had a made two or three point shot...
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That's the "horizontal swirl" (I think). I was speaking of the "vertical swirl."
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