The Official Forum

The Official Forum (https://forum.officiating.com/)
-   Basketball (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/)
-   -   On The Line ... (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/102474-line.html)

BillyMac Sat Mar 25, 2017 01:28pm

On The Line ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by AremRed (Post 1003352)
... signals two shots on a 1 and 1, stands on the court next to defender. Realizes it is supposed to be 1 and 1, backs out of lane ...

Is this the correct NCAA mechanic for the first of two free throws, i.e., the lead standing on the lane line next to the defender?

If so, this explains why we've got a lot of subvarsity high school officials doing this when it's not the proper mechanic under our current IAABO high school mechanics set (after bouncing the ball to the free thrower, the lead backs off four feet behind the lane line and off the court near the endline).

What's the proper mechanic under the NFHS mechanics set?

bucky Sat Mar 25, 2017 04:53pm

They do it in the NBA, however, for all other levels, I am not aware of this being a proper mechanic and have see it taught at college camps to specifically not be done as well. For multiple free throws however, I do not see the problem with standing there until the last FT attempted. I would like to see a change made that allows it.

SC Official Sat Mar 25, 2017 04:59pm

NFHS you're supposed to be in the same position for all free throws.

NCAA-M you're supposed to be just outside the lane line for all but the last.

NCAA-W you're supposed to be in the position you describe for all but the last.

BillyMac Sun Mar 26, 2017 11:48am

See It On Television ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by bucky (Post 1003444)
They do it in the NBA ...

Which explains why a lot of our younger guys are doing it that way.

BillyMac Sun Mar 26, 2017 11:49am

All Free Throws ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by SC Official (Post 1003445)
NFHS you're supposed to be in the same position for all free throws.

Thanks. Same as IAABO.

bucky Sun Mar 26, 2017 02:22pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by BillyMac (Post 1003475)
Which explains why a lot of our younger guys are doing it that way.

I see your point but no so sure I agree as NBA refs do lots of other things (specific to the NBA) that younger officials do not do.:cool:

JRutledge Sun Mar 26, 2017 02:35pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by BillyMac (Post 1003475)
Which explains why a lot of our younger guys are doing it that way.

Actually this has been done as long as I can remember by some. It used to be the mechanic and changed in an unannounced way. Then you see guys doing it that have been around a lot as well. I do not see many young guys do it anymore. Actually do not see many officials do it period if they work for supervisors at the college level that tell them not to do this (which is most in my experience).

It is probably one of these things guys do because they do not know better, but it is not something talked about that much either. Unless you go to camp or are being evaluated, this is not something I see hardly at all anymore.

Peace

just another ref Sun Mar 26, 2017 02:38pm

We do it here. I like it. It helps both players and officials keep up with the fact that we're shooting two shots.

Rich Sun Mar 26, 2017 02:44pm

I don't do it, but it *should* be the mechanic. NCAAW has it right, IMO.

SC Official Sun Mar 26, 2017 03:12pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rich (Post 1003490)
I don't do it, but it *should* be the mechanic. NCAAW has it right, IMO.

Agreed. I think NCAA-W has a lot of things right. This mechanic, bouncing across the lane on backcourt throw-ins, two-hand reporting, walk-and-talk, no chop by the administering official...all preferred by me in comparison to NFHS.

bob jenkins Sun Mar 26, 2017 04:00pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by SC Official (Post 1003491)
no chop by the administering official

I'm not sure what that one is.

I'd add: C has last-second shot.

I'm ambivalent on table-side vs. opposite.

Rich Sun Mar 26, 2017 04:01pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by SC Official (Post 1003491)
Agreed. I think NCAA-W has a lot of things right. This mechanic, bouncing across the lane on backcourt throw-ins, two-hand reporting, walk-and-talk, no chop by the administering official...all preferred by me in comparison to NFHS.

The only NCAAW mechanic I don't like is looking out of the post to cover the corner. Might fit in the NBA / NCAAW, but doesn't work as well in my HS boys games.

SC Official Sun Mar 26, 2017 04:32pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by bob jenkins (Post 1003502)
I'm not sure what that one is.

I'd add: C has last-second shot.

I'm ambivalent on table-side vs. opposite.

Official administering the throw-in doesn't chop with the non-counting arm, is what I was referring to.

I guess another one would be no long switches, but in SC we don't really long switch for high school games, anyway, despite what the NFHS manual says.

JRutledge Sun Mar 26, 2017 04:44pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by SC Official (Post 1003491)
Agreed. I think NCAA-W has a lot of things right. This mechanic, bouncing across the lane on backcourt throw-ins, two-hand reporting, walk-and-talk, no chop by the administering official...all preferred by me in comparison to NFHS.

Bouncing across the lane looks very lazy to me. And I am so glad we do not do many of those things in Men's basketball. I would not want them in HS either, but that is me. Too much issues with mechanics that really do not do anything to help us officiate IMO. If they did, I might have a different opinion.

Peace

frezer11 Sun Mar 26, 2017 07:03pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rich (Post 1003503)
The only NCAAW mechanic I don't like is looking out of the post to cover the corner. Might fit in the NBA / NCAAW, but doesn't work as well in my HS boys games.

I hear you. It's a hard habit to break too, and I just don't see the advantage in doing it. Like someone else posted, I really like a lot of the other approved mechanics in women's, but this one I could do without.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:38pm.



Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0 RC1