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(This also came up in our Thursday night social, but deserves a separate thread.)
Team A has the ball with 20-some seconds left in the period. For whatever reason the timekeeper starts the clock 3 seconds late, but nobody says anything. Team A goes into their stall offense to wait for the clock to run down before attacking. With 3 seconds left on the clock, the official blows the play dead and says he's been counting the time (for all this time ?) and that the period is over. While this is a HTBT thing in my mind, my question is if you know the clock was improperly started and a team isn't aggressively attacking their basket, would you whistle play dead and correct the time, just to avoid this sort of situation? I could see if there was 5 seconds left and there was no time to reasonably correct the clock, but with 20+ seconds and a team trying for the last shot, it seems like this could have been caught sooner.
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"Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible." – Dalai Lama The center of attention as the lead & trail. – me Games officiated: 525 Basketball · 76 Softball · 16 Baseball |
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If they're in a stall offense, I'd generally blow it dead (after making ABSOLUTELY sure B wasn't even considering attempting to steal the ball).
If he's sure that the clock started 3 seconds late, though, he's technically correct in blowing it dead. Although you're going to have a very upset A coach, especially if his plan was to start his play at 3 seconds left on the clock.
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"To win the game is great. To play the game is greater. But to love the game is the greatest of all." |
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In this situation I would use some common sense and simply ignore the timer's error. Both teams are consenting to run the clock down to the last few ticks and then have a final play. If we use the above example of attacking with 3 seconds remaining on the clock, what difference does it make if they run off 17 or 20 seconds before then? None, IMO.
Those extra seconds in the stall are meaningless. [Edited by Nevadaref on Sep 25th, 2004 at 10:54 PM] |
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I would agree with Mark, and disagree with Nevada. As soon as you notice the clock is not running, blow the play dead and adjust it.
In theory, Nevada is right. The extra 3 seconds don't matter if they're gonna run it down to 3 anyway. But if anybody else notices the clock, and you don't take care of it, you will look very very bad. Observers LOVE clock awareness. If you're aware of it, fix it. JMO
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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While I am in NO way advocating that my above suggestion is correct according to the rules, I do believe that you will get more acceptance and have a better chance of getting out of that gym alive using my just ignore it philosophy, than if you handle the situation the way stated in Stat-man's original post. |
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Rule 5-10-2 says that the ref can correct a timer's error if he has definite knowlege of the timer's error. The error should have been corrected prior to the stopping of the backcourt count. There is no reason to continue a count after that, unless the offensive player is closely guarded, which is not the case in this situation. The ref has no business keeping the game clock in his head. Make the correction or ignore the error. Keeping a silent count of the game clock is contrary to the spirit of the rules.
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Counting down to 3 and blowing the whistle to end the period is NOT the right thing to do. Either blow it dead and fix it or forget it. There could be debates on which is better. I'm leaning towards stopping it and fixing it. Depends on how much really should be taken off. 1, perhaps 2, I might just ignore it. 3+, probably stopping it to get it right. Heck, if that's the case, the clock keeper has probably not yet started the clock at all.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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If you are counting the seconds in your head, how is anyone to know how much time is left? You can use definite knowlege to correct the clock, not to replace it. |
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Sometimes you have to count in your head to get it right.
If you have 3 or 4 seconds left and the team is going to the basket that may be all you can do. The ideal situation is to stop and correct it, but I have had games where the clock started way late. I had definite knowledge and killed the game while time was on the clock. |
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