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I have seen what I think is a developing trend. In at least 4 varsity games I have done this year (4 different teams) I see players pushing opponents out of the way to get rebounding position. I talked it with my partners last night and I think we called it 4 times. Now, I am trying real hard not to call it because I don't want to go into a game with a bias, but the ones I have called are very obvious. My question is (and maybe this is more a coaching question: are players taught this or is this from watching games on TV? Also, I know some contact has to be allowed when getting position for a rebound (incidental is okay), but where do you draw the line between incidental contact and a foul? For example, if A1 pushes B1 out of a spot but the ball goes the opposite way off the rim so neither has a chance, do you call it? Also, does anyone else see this happening more or am I just absolutely missing something here? Thanks.
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Remember, every player has the right to a spot on the floor as long as they are there first. So any displacing would be a foul. I would do some preventive officiating by tell the offender to knock it off before I called a foul. Usually that works.
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Pushing a player off a spot is a foul. There is a POE every year talking about rough play, well this is the type of play they are talking about. Get it early and it will stop, pass and it's the type of play that escalates into harder fouls later on in the game. |
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This is one area that I feel I need to address in my game. So let me reiterate what I think I'm hearing, and ya'll can tell me if I've misunderstood.
Shot goes up and B2 pushes A2 under the basket on the left-hand side of the basket. Rebound goes to the right. I should ignore the fact that the rebound went to right and call the foul? Rather, I likely should have already called the foul before the rebound occurred. Also, as long as the shot was in the air before the foul occurred, the basket will count if it goes -- no matter which team the foul is on. Is all that about right?
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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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Sometimes the direction of the rebound may cause contact. Let's say A1 has inside position on B1 and the rebound goes long and both players jump back in the direction of the ball, you are likely to have incidental contact on this type of play, with team A screaming for an "over the back" foul. ![]() Blantant displacement falls under rough play, and advantage/disadvantage should not be a determining factor in calling the foul. Yes a basket should count if a foul occurs after the ball is released, unless that foul is on the airborne shooter. |
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The reason you see it as a developing trend is because there are :
1) too many officials who do not watch for this because they arent watching off ball 2) just not calling it... I had a game the other day and the ball went up on a three point shot, the defensive kid down low had two hands in the back of the offensive low post player and gave him a good push. I hated calling a 3 point basket good and then giving the team that just scored the ball. However as soon as I blew the whistle the offesnse was screaming did you see the push! Duh why did my whistle go off? But if I had not called it I know it would have escalated at the other end and been worse. If it is a minor bump opposite the rebound you may use ad/disad but when in doubt. CALL IT! |
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Kelvin,
Thanks. My original post was a curiosity question to see if this is happening in other places too. I agree with your point and I plan on covering this in the pre-game. I agree completely with you that if this is allowed to happen it can get out of control. |
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