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Did anyone see the blind pick set by Srewell on Fischer on Sunday night? Fischer hit the ground immediately on contact, Spree was still, then left the area.
HS rules (10-6-3), lead me to believe no foul should have been called here, incidental contact, opponent stopped immediately and screener was not displaced. How would you call that in HS? Are NBA rules different on this? Commentators are incredulous that this could be a foul on Fischer. |
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First of all, I don't know if the NBA rules are different than NFHS rules on screening.
Second of all, commentators are often incredulous on correct calls because most commentators have never opened a rule book and have no training in officiating. I have seen that play "no called" in the NBA before. However, it did not appear as if the defender made any attempt avoid contact (he can thank his teammates lack of communication for that) and that may have been the official's basis for calling that foul on the defense. Z |
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Do you normally call a foul on the Defense when a "true" blind screen collision occurs? I love that type of play when executed properly by the offense but do not penalize the defender for being blind-sided.
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"We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done." Chris Z. Detroit/SE Michigan ![]() |
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I think we had a similar discussion during this year's or last year's NCAA tournament. Screener was completely stationary, gave plenty of time and distance. Screened player had no idea screener was there and a fairly violent collision resulted. Screened player went down in a heap, screener continued on his merry way. There was no whistle on the play.
My opinion on the NCAA play was that there was no foul on the play. I saw the Spreewell play only once and can't really remember it well enough to comment. I'm sure JR can dredge up the link to that old thread. ![]()
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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"We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done." Chris Z. Detroit/SE Michigan ![]() |
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[/B][/QUOTE]Yabut, WAS it a foul? Or just strong incidental contact on a legal screen? |
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When I first heard the philosophy of "if there is contact that results in a body on the floor, there had better be a whistle," I wasn't sure I agreed... but I have become convinced that it is correct, for the high school game. Every once in a great while, it may cause a tough foul to be assessed against a player that might normally have got away with some hard (but formerly legal) contact. However, it leads to a less physical game which is exactly what you want at the HS level. The players adjust and the game becomes more finesse and clean. IMHO, that is why some "college officials" often don't have great success at the high school tournaments in Washington State. The observers want a tight game called and the college officials often don't adjust down to the high school level and they let it get too rough. Z Quote:
The point made by our director is that at the HS level, contact that causes bodies to hit the ground is not incidental.... and certainly not to the parents and A.D.'s. Z [Edited by zebraman on May 25th, 2004 at 02:48 PM] |
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[Edited by Jurassic Referee on May 25th, 2004 at 03:33 PM] |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by zebraman
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"We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done." Chris Z. Detroit/SE Michigan ![]() |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
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