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does 10 second count not start over in D1 any more?
KU OSU yesterday, OSU throws in from backcourt, KU deflected it out in backcourt so OSU throws it in again at 1049, and Sirmons calls backcourt at 1043? No one questions? New rule? It was 6 seconds!
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Forgot To Subtract ...
I know very little about NCAA ten second rules or shot clock rules (I know more about rocket science), but could this have been caused by confusion in using the shot clock rather than a visible count to "count" ten seconds?
If so, we could have the same confusion in a NFHS game with shot clock. |
that is what happened, but when it is a 6 second call, how the whole gym doesn't know what happened is beyond me.
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Need more context. What was the start of the play? Was this in the first or second half? There is some stuff missing to know what was ruled on.
Basically, an out-of-bounds violation where the team with the ball retains possession in their backcourt, the 10-second clock does not start over. They must get it across at 20 seconds on the shot clock. If the ball was in the FC, if the ball is thrown to the BC, then there is a new 10-second count. All based on what the read of the shot clock says at the time. They can get a new timeout if there is a timeout called, or an official's timeout or a stoppage based on the official decision. So to really answer we would have to know how the play started. That is key to seeing if it was just a mistake or properly adjudicated. Peace |
No Start Over ...
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I told everybody that I know more about rocket science than NCAA ten second rules. |
Second half BTW
Just went back an saw this play.
There was an out-of-bounds violation in the BC that Oklahoma State Retained the ball in their BC. The shot clock said 25 seconds. They have until 20 to get it across as I said the shot clock never reset and there is a not a new 10-second count. They had 5 seconds. Now not sure how well the crew communicated that to the players or the team. And maybe the player did not know the rule or did not realize they had to get it across (which they often don't) in 5 seconds. But they got the rule right. And the broadcast went away from the floor and was doing some graphics, so it was not clear what communication was done or not done. Usually, talk about this in my pre-games (I am nowhere near these guys' levels BTW) at the small college level and even yesterday we talked about this situation when I worked. We said how we need to make it clear to everyone and each other if this happens when the violation can happen, even when it does not normally start at 30. You could have had a timeout at 25 and then the team has until 15 to get it across and usually there is still confusion on the teams or they are not aware the time changed. Peace |
Struggles Against A Press ...
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Happy New Year ...
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Peace |
Be Prepared ...
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OK, then that rule has changed since I officiated a decade or so ago. Used to be a reset and new 10 seconds. that explains why no one complained. lol.
Just curious, anyone remember when it was changed? It is a change for the better, although doesn't make sense you can call t/o to get a reset. thanks, |
Steep Price To Pay ...
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NCAAW is different from NCAAM on some of this.
It *used to be* that anytime there was a stoppage, the offense would get a new 10-seconds (similar to the HS rule). Now, the offense gets a new 10-seconds, except: H -- Held ball and the arrow favors the offense O -- ball out of bounds off the defense T -- Time out request by the offense (this is different from NCAAM) T -- Technical foul (administrative) to the team in control |
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The 10 second count has been the same for NCAA men's for quite a while now. There's no confusion in regards to using the shot clock. Since you have no idea, I'm not sure why you're throwing stuff up against the wall. Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk |
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