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In NFHS, if B1 slaps the ball while in the hands of A1 attempting to inbound from OOB area, is it an automatic technical foul, or do you give a warning first?
What if B1 does not touch ball, but reaches over plane of OOB line - is it then warning for 1st offense, technical for 2nd offense (indiv warnings or team warnings?)? |
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Don't have my rule book here at work but this is what i think:
Yes on the first issue team warning on second issue unless in the last 5 seconds of game with clock running then just T with no warning--probably best just to ignore going reaching over in the last 5 seconds depending on score etc. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Had this happen the other day. Jr High game, in OT getting near the end, OOB on the side, kid gets excited and reaches through and slaps the ball. I didn't T him up, I didn't feel it was the time or place, and the poor kid would have been devastated...just warned him, and no it didn't make a difference in the outcome, and no matter what is said after this post, I will do it again in the same situation...Varsity or JV is different Jr High I stick with what I did
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Had the exact same situation happen TWICE (once on each team) in a game last weekend. Warned 'em on both (on the second, had to think for a second before realizing that it was the OTHER team I had warned on the previous infraction, which was at the exact same spot on the endline in the first half).
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"And I'm not just some fan, I've refereed football and basketball in addition to all the baseball I've umpired. I've never made a call that horrible in my life in any sport."---Greatest. Official. Ever. |
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Did a club basketball game for 10 & 11 year olds. Kid looking the other way accidentally made contact with the ball. Rule says T. Nobody said anything when I played like I saw nothing. Kid got the ball inbounds fine and the game continued. Sometimes its easier not to see the call than to see it and have to make a decision.
I'd hate to have one coach screaming, "That's a T" Those club basketball coaches and parents are a scary group of people. |
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First delay without contact - Team warning Second delay without contact - Team Technical Any reach with contact - immediate Player Technical.
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"There are no superstar calls. We don't root for certain teams. We don't cheat. But sometimes we just miss calls." - Joe Crawford |
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I think his point is that the kids have to learn the rule sometime; and isn't it better if they learn it in a 7th/8th grade game than in the last 2 minutes of a varsity game? Maybe they could learn it without giving the T, but it is the rule; and if you ignore it -- and the other coach knows the rule -- you could have a problem. And by the way, I am seriously saying that I call a 7th grade girls game the same way I call my varsity games: advantage/disadvantage. Just my $.02
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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I think we take the "T-foul" tttooooo seriously. The T is just another foul. Ignoring the rule by not issueing a T when there is no judgement is putting too much importance on the T. There is no judgement when contact is made on the ball oob. Its just two shots. You might as well ignore a shooting foul. It has the same penalty. (By that I mean there is no change of possession). Also, if you are trying to move up in the officiating ranks, you never know who might be watching.
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foulbuster |
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