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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 01:16am
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Tonight I had a girls varsity game with the players not having much for skills. This is one of my 1st high school games of the season and compared to the 25 NAIA and D-2 women's college games that I have worked so far... the lack of skill threw me off a couple of times.... Once on this particular play I wish that I could see again.

Defensive rebound under the hoop with the shooting team bumping the girl with the ball slightly.... Or so I thought.

The girl had the ball and after the bump held her pivot foot and pivoted 3 times slowly backwards to gain / keep her ballance. On her last swing of her non pivot foot she stepped on the endline OOB.

I felt it was to late to go back and get the foul as the girl that made the contact was now getting back on D and she was behind the 3 point line... (A long ways away from the play). I blew my whistle and gave it back to the same team.

As you would imagin the crowd and the coach sure didn't like the call. After a bit of play there was a time out and I waited for the team to come out after the huddle and I explained that I had passed on a foul. She ( the coach) was fine with it after I had a chance to explain.

Here is my question......... What would you have done? Called the foul? Or.... Pass on the foul and give it back to the same team? or..... Call the OOB and give it to the other team? I really didn't feel that the "bump" was enough to have a foul but as it played out......... It was an advantage. Whats your call?
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 01:22am
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Quote:
Originally posted by BOBBYMO
Tonight I had a girls varsity game with the players not having much for skills. This is one of my 1st high school games of the season and compared to the 25 NAIA and D-2 women's college games that I have worked so far... the lack of skill threw me off a couple of times.... Once on this particular play I wish that I could see again.

Defensive rebound under the hoop with the shooting team bumping the girl with the ball slightly.... Or so I thought.

The girl had the ball and after the bump held her pivot foot and pivoted 3 times slowly backwards to gain / keep her ballance. On her last swing of her non pivot foot she stepped on the endline OOB.

I felt it was to late to go back and get the foul as the girl that made the contact was now getting back on D and she was behind the 3 point line... (A long ways away from the play). I blew my whistle and gave it back to the same team.

As you would imagin the crowd and the coach sure didn't like the call. After a bit of play there was a time out and I waited for the team to come out after the huddle and I explained that I had passed on a foul. She ( the coach) was fine with it after I had a chance to explain.

Here is my question......... What would you have done? Called the foul? Or.... Pass on the foul and give it back to the same team? or..... Call the OOB and give it to the other team? I really didn't feel that the "bump" was enough to have a foul but as it played out......... It was an advantage. Whats your call?
It's better to be late and right.

The contact did not immediately put the player at a disadvantage, but it did cause her to violate.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 01:35am
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Originally posted by BushRef
If you blow this whistle and there's no one in the area, you gotta call the violaton. How far out of bounds did she step? Could you have just "missed" seeing her step on the line and gone the other way?
Why?

You are penalizing a player for getting pushed. If she violates you HAVE to call the foul, no matter how late it is, are job is to get it right and not to try to look good.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 09:14am
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I'll go with Bushref.. if she just maybe tip toed the line and then moved it back in, i'm probably not going to see it, and let them play on... but if it's real obvious you have to get the foul...better late than never, and have to explain it!!
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 09:22am
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Why should this "incidental contact" be penalized as a foul? Seems to me the rebounder had plenty of time to find her balance and stay in bounds, or pass the ball to someone in better position. Even if she didn't, I'd find it hard to call this a foul. More like she just happened to be in a bad place to get the rebound and stepped out of bounds. But I didn't actually see it, of course.

Calling this a foul gives undue advantage to the rebounding team. (But I'll save advantage/disadvantage for another thread) Maybe had B1 not been so close to the end line, Team A may have gotten the ball back.

Hartsy
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 09:33am
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I say if you passed on the foul, you have to call the violation. The force out rule is no in the book, so that option doesn't exist.

From what I'm reading, it took 3 pivots to regain her balance, so you've got a "foul" that took place 3 or 4 seconds ago, with no whistle. I'm not going back 4 seconds to get it right. I just missed it. The violation can't be ignored, and ignoring the violation is not a viable solution. We all know better than to issue a make-up call.

You missed the foul, move on. The player violated by stepping on the line, call the violation.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 11:23am
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Quote:
Originally posted by Grail
I say if you passed on the foul, you have to call the violation. The force out rule is no in the book, so that option doesn't exist.

From what I'm reading, it took 3 pivots to regain her balance, so you've got a "foul" that took place 3 or 4 seconds ago, with no whistle. I'm not going back 4 seconds to get it right. I just missed it. The violation can't be ignored, and ignoring the violation is not a viable solution. We all know better than to issue a make-up call.

You missed the foul, move on. The player violated by stepping on the line, call the violation.

Grail:

Your last paragraph says it all. Well put.

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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 12:34pm
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I never once considered this to be a " make up " call. But do consider this to be a " Fair " call.

It was too late to call the foul even though there was an advantage. We are taught to have a slow whistle and see the whole play. 99.9 % of the time this works well but on this play it came back and bit me.

At the time I didn't consider the bump to be any advantage at all so I passed on the Foul.

The bump did cause the player to go out of bounds as she never regained her ballance so I did what I felt was fair at the time... I gave the ball back to the team that was put at a disadvantage.

I have passed on contact in the past but it has always seamed to work itself out. This play it didn't.

I have never nor will I ever pass on a player "barely" stepping on the OOB line. To me this is a cut and dried call that must be called every time.

I agree that calling the OOB and giving it to the other team would have been the easy thing to do.... But is it fair?

I just did what I felt was fair in this sittuation and would like to hear what others would have done after passing on the innitial contact.

Am I wrong for this?
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 01:16pm
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Quote:
Originally posted by Grail
I say if you passed on the foul, you have to call the violation. The force out rule is no in the book, so that option doesn't exist.

From what I'm reading, it took 3 pivots to regain her balance, so you've got a "foul" that took place 3 or 4 seconds ago, with no whistle. I'm not going back 4 seconds to get it right. I just missed it. The violation can't be ignored, and ignoring the violation is not a viable solution. We all know better than to issue a make-up call.

You missed the foul, move on. The player violated by stepping on the line, call the violation.
Sometimes it takes a few seconds to determine advantage/disadvantage. I had a college player get bumped on a rebound and I had thought that the player had cleared the rebound -- but within a second or two the player fell.

I didn't "miss" anything. I saw the contact. Once it was clear to me that the contact put the rebounder at a disadvantage it went from "contact" to a "foul".

Better late than never and since I'm going to take grief from someone, I'd rather it be the coach whose player caused the "violation."

--Rich
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 01:18pm
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In the situation described, I think I'd call the actual violation and forget about the foul you passed on. Half of the crowd isn't going to like your call anyway, so why not get it right? You can always make sure you get the next bump for sure.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 05:43pm
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Pass on the foul. Good move. It's not a foul; quit considering it as such.

Rebounder had ample opportunity to gain her balance. She didn't. She could have gained that balance. She could have passed. She could have began a dribble. She didn't. Move on.

She stepped on the line. That's violation - call it and enforce it properly. Remember, you didn't have a foul. Now you have a violation; call it. She had opportunity to recover and she didn't. Not your fault. And as you have already stated (by not calling a foul), it is also not the defense's fault.

What if she fell down instead of stepped on the line? Would you be willing to call that traveling violation and then give her the ball back?

I know if I was your partner, I would sure be wondering what you were doing.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 05:54pm
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Quote:
Originally posted by Hartsy
Why should this "incidental contact" be penalized as a foul? Seems to me the rebounder had plenty of time to find her balance and stay in bounds, or pass the ball to someone in better position. Even if she didn't, I'd find it hard to call this a foul. More like she just happened to be in a bad place to get the rebound and stepped out of bounds. But I didn't actually see it, of course.

Calling this a foul gives undue advantage to the rebounding team. (But I'll save advantage/disadvantage for another thread) Maybe had B1 not been so close to the end line, Team A may have gotten the ball back.

Hartsy
I doubt this would fall under incidental contact. This contact put the rebounder at a severe disadvantage, but if I pass on the foul then wait a few seconds, I'm not calling the foul anymore. I'll just call the violation. It may not be fair, but you shouldn't ignore the violation and the penalties it carries with it.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 06:06pm
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Quote:
Originally posted by BOBBYMO
I have passed on contact in the past but it has always seamed to work itself out. This play it didn't.
Anyone that has a patient whistle has been caught in this situation before. It's very rare (if you're good), but inevitable.

You asked what I do, I go with my gut. My internal clock will tell me if I can go back and get that foul. In this situation, it sounds like I'm calling the violation.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 08:14pm
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I tend to think gut feeling goes here. Slow whistles are great, but if it was a kinda-sorta-maybe foul, and you didn't call it within one or two seconds - it's probably not a foul.
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Old Tue Dec 14, 2004, 09:07pm
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Quote:
Originally posted by ref18
Quote:
Originally posted by Hartsy
Why should this "incidental contact" be penalized as a foul? Seems to me the rebounder had plenty of time to find her balance and stay in bounds, or pass the ball to someone in better position. Even if she didn't, I'd find it hard to call this a foul. More like she just happened to be in a bad place to get the rebound and stepped out of bounds. But I didn't actually see it, of course.

Calling this a foul gives undue advantage to the rebounding team. (But I'll save advantage/disadvantage for another thread) Maybe had B1 not been so close to the end line, Team A may have gotten the ball back.

Hartsy
I doubt this would fall under incidental contact. This contact put the rebounder at a severe disadvantage, but if I pass on the foul then wait a few seconds, I'm not calling the foul anymore. I'll just call the violation. It may not be fair, but you shouldn't ignore the violation and the penalties it carries with it.
Two wrongs don't make a right.

Like I said, our job is not to look good, it's to be fair and to get the call right.

You can't say in one sentence the contact put the rebounder at a severe disadvantage, and then in another, why should you ignore the penalty for the violation.

You are ignoring a foul, rewarding the fouler and penalizing the player that was fouled. How can that be right?
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