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-   -   Pedometer? (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/12782-pedometer.html)

ref18 Sun Mar 21, 2004 06:48pm

I'd like to see how many miles the officials on the UAB-Washington game racked up.

rainmaker Sun Mar 21, 2004 07:09pm

Quote:

Originally posted by TimTaylor
The technology varies, bus most pedometers use some type of "g" sensor to measure the number of steps or strides you take. You then multiply this by the length of your normal stride to get approximate distance.

I tried wearing my wife's pedometer for several games this season & averaged roughly 3500 strides per game. It takes me an average of 12 strides to make a lead/trail transition or vice versa, which on an average court is approx. 60 feet - translating into 5 feet per stride. Say I knock off 500 walking strides for misc. activities not in transition, this works out to approx. 15,000 feet, or just under 3 miles per game - 90% of which is done in sprints. Add to that the 500 strides at a normal gait of 2.5 feet and you get almost another 1/4 mile.

Not a bad workout for 75-90 minutes....now I know why those double-headers wear me out!

Tim -- Did you and I chat at the Blazers game last evening? Welcome to the board! It's a good one, isn't it? Don't forget to drop me an e-mail. juulie alias rainmaker

OverAndBack Sun Mar 21, 2004 07:39pm

Let's say it's 2.5 miles. That's 13,200 feet. If a junior high court is 74 feet and a high school court is 84 feet long, you'd have to go up and back 178 times on a junior high court and 157 times on a high school court. That's all the way from one endline to the other, which we don't always do. If we're the lead on the one endline, we become the trail at the other end, and go probably 3/4 of the way down. I know there's some switching and some side-to-side and going to the table and stuff, but I'm skeptical that you'd go end-to-end 40+ times in a quarter.

I mean, I know we run quite a bit and all (my hamstrings would feel it after doing the typical three-games-back-to-back-to-back in my league), I'm just slightly skeptical it could be quite that much in actual mileage. I would think pedometers would be more accurate in a straight line, Point-A to Point-B, relatively constant stride situation and not in the stop-start-slide-walk-stand-sprint-stop-slide way we have to do our jobs.

Of course, I could be wrong.

TimTaylor Sun Mar 21, 2004 08:31pm

Quote:

Originally posted by rainmaker


Tim -- Did you and I chat at the Blazers game last evening? Welcome to the board! It's a good one, isn't it? Don't forget to drop me an e-mail. juulie alias rainmaker [/B]
Yep, twas I.....you were right,this is a great board, glad I took your advice & checked it out.

email we discussed on the way this evening...

Tim

Jimgolf Mon Mar 22, 2004 11:25am

It depends how much you move
 
We have a referee (one of the the league officials, which is why he still gets games) who barely moves at all. If he's over 200 yards a game, I'd be amazed. He mostly stands in the middle and turns around. The other refs call him "The Lighthouse".


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