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You can't penalize a team for the actions of a person who is not on that team, except in very specific situations. (And even then, we're told only to penalize when absolutely necessary). In this situation, the kid who dunks isn't on the team. That makes him a follower of the team, nothing more. Would you T a kid in street-clothes who came on the court and dunked? No, you'd tell him to get off the court. Same here. No penalty. Get him off the court.
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I would agree. But whenever he dunks the ball and you go to report the T and he's not in the book because he doesn't play, then you've got a heck of a problem. BTW: This didn't happen to me. I was watching a V warm up on one end the their JV on the other and thought "what if". Oh yeah, Chuck have you started using pipe bits instead of wrapping your whistle?? T Jones |
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Originally posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr.
In the case being discussed, the officials' educated assumption should be that all players in uniform are part of the team which is going to play in that game. Why? Because they have no reason not to assume otherwise. Sure, I'd assume that too. But when new information presents itself and I find that the kid is not on the team, I don't give a T and I just get him to leave the floor. Simple as that with no lasting controversy or abusing my referee powers. I just can't imagine a situation where I give a "T" to someone who isn't a player. Z |
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Tough choice! |
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Thought from an unqualified-but streetsmart poster
Sometimes it is better to be "smart" than "right".
Show some skill and artistry, and deal with the situation without putting a "T" on the JV team. Be a leader and teacher on the court, not the cop in "Les Miserable" IMHO you should be looking for reasons NOT to interject yourself into the game, not ways to show off your ultimate power and authority. |
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I agree, there are many ways to get out of this situation without a T and nobody will make a big fuss. I think I would either know they aren't on the JV team because they didn't come out for warm-ups with the JV team or tell them to shoot at their own end if I came out after they did at which point they would tell me they aren't on the JV team. Either way, you can let them shoot and say something to him when he dunks or tell them to get off of the court until their warm-ups before their game.
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usually varsity players want to make sure people don't confuse them with a JV player, so the only reason for him to be out there is to "show off". i think i'd just let him know his time is in an hour and a half and since i'm on that game to, i'll be watching. don't get mad about it, say it with a smile and he should go peacefully. maybe bring it up with the coach because next time, the refs might not handle it like we did today.
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Administrative...
Sounds to me like this is an administrative problem so if you want to get involved fine but you could go to the administrator on duty and have him address this issue. It certainly has no penalty associated with it. No sense looking for trouble because it is going to find you anyway!! You are an official not a policeman.
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Maybe I could put the tape over the pipe bit. . .
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