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The Downside of Double Whistles
The responses you, esteemed and seasoned veterans of the Forum, give to this inquiry will help our local association trainer develop a training lesson on the topic of "Double Whistles". The initial aim is, by means of a review of approved (NFHS) mechanics and video illustrations, to prompt our officials to avoid double whistles. I probably coulda stated that better, but you get the idea.
Please complete the statement below with a brief response or two: "Double whistles should be avoided because . . ."
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Making Every Effort to Be in the Right Place at the Right Time, Looking at the Right Thing to Make the Right Call |
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Quote:
"When we have a double whistle, I as one of the whistlees must...." They aren't going anywhere so isn't it better to just address the what to do after?
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in OS I trust |
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My thinking is similar to Deecee's, in that its more important to learn how to handle them. I've never even been involved with discussions on how or even IF they ought to be minimized. All I can think of is that you are hoping to keep people from ball watching.
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It depends. Sometimes, they're good. Sometimes, they're an indication that someone is ball-watching.
If you have a double whistle on a hand-check clearly and well into one one official's primary, that is probably not a good double whistle. If you have a double whistle on a rebound with lots of contact, that is OK. If you have a double whistle on a play at the boundary of two primaries, that is fine too....better to have both briefly on-ball rather than neither on ball. Unless the double whistle is an indicator of another problem, it is not a problem on its own.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Whistler
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If you ain't first, you're LAST!!! |
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Agree with those above. I would never say that double whistles should be avoided. Often times, they are a very good thing. Best to train officials on what to do when they occur......
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk |
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As long as each official is taking care of their primary, then I have no problem with double whistles.
I'll give you an example of a double whistle that irked me a bit... During a free throw, I was the center, and therefore responsible for watching the free throw shooter and the top two marked lane spaces on the opposite side. A teammate of the FT shooter I was responsible for violated, and right before I blew my whistle my partner... who was the trail... blew his for it. At halftime I asked him what the trail official during a FT is responsible for. He knew the answer, but said he was looking there because nothing else was going on. I don't buy that answer, because we all know that while things are good now, that doesn't mean they can't change for the worse at the drop of a hat. He should have been watching his area, and trust his partner (me) to watch mine. That is an example of a "bad" double whistle. |
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In addition to the comments above about what to do after a double whistle, I think it would be more beneficial to give training on how to officiate your primary coverage area, a secondary coverage area, and more importantly, each match-up on the floor.
If you have three officials appropriately covering each match-up on the floor, with an understanding of primary coverage and secondary coverage areas, you minimize unnecessary double whistles but ensure every play is covered adequately. You are starting your training with a faulty premise, in my opinion. |
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I simply do not believe that there is anything wrong with double whistles. Often they are very good because they show that you are watching the same thing. But in the lane double whistles are common.
Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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ALL these responses are being forwarded. Thank you for those thus far given. Any more thoughts on the general topic of "Double Whistles" that haven't been expressed?
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Making Every Effort to Be in the Right Place at the Right Time, Looking at the Right Thing to Make the Right Call |
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What about triple whistles...had one in my game last night. Two of us had #10, one had a different foul on #33. The one with #33 yielded, not because he was outnumbered but because the other two of us had the best views (and before he even know we had different players). There were at least 3 possible players to call the foul on for the play....multiple defenders collapsed on a shooter in the lane from different directions.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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My question on double whistles is this... Why are you looking there instead of your primary?
There are fine reasons for them (like the lead following somebody driving from their PCA into the lane), though. Sent from my SM-G925V using Tapatalk |
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Quote:
Even in a two person game (which I was not originally referring to), there are plays on the back side that would be only seen by the T and not the L. So you might have a double whistle easily for those reasons. PCA does not mean, "only my area." It means it is your primary, but there are several reasons to have secondary coverage. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) Last edited by JRutledge; Fri Dec 30, 2016 at 08:04pm. |
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