Quote:
Originally posted by Nevadaref
Quote:
Originally posted by SteveMcClellan
It would seem that (with there being no lag time), time would have to be put back on the clock, unless it is required that the officials have definitive knowledge before adjusting the clock, as is the case in NFHS. Is the "definitive knowledge" requirement in place in NCAA?
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Yes it is, but they can get this information from the courtside monitor.
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... If there is a moinitor.
There's also the same (or substantially similar) language in the book that "if a foul or violation occurs so close to the end of a period that the timer can't stop the clock before the horn, the period ends with the foul or violation."
The "lag time" only comes into play when the official blows the whistle, sees the time remaining (either immedeiatley, or subsequently using the monitor) and the timer stops the clock within one second. In FED, we leave the time where it stopepd; in NCAA we reset it to what the official saw. (If more than one second ran off the clock, reset it to waht the official saw in both cases).
So, imho, both answers to the question are correct, depending on whether there was a monitor, and depending on what the official saw.