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That said, I'd almost bet my left one that if we asked the official, we'd find out that your assistant was whining at him. That's usually the cause of these type of "T"s- not just an assistant coach silently and innocently standing there. |
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I don't understand why some people on this board always feel the need to not answer some peoples question just to be an a$$. It seems like Dan ref doesn't like to answer certain questions.
Why can't the coach's question be answered if that is the way it happened. I will give you my opinion coach. If your situation happened as you say it did, I think that official was a moron to give a T. I can not see any reason or good that can come from giving a T there unless the official wants to make sure that the game doesn't go into overtime. I hope this helps more than some of the others here. [Edited by Redhouse on Jan 26th, 2005 at 10:07 AM] |
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Inexperienced officials get crammed full of rules and points of emphasis and where to stand and where to look. Bench decorum (including who is allowed to be off the bench) is a perpetual point of emphasis in many areas. It is at least possible that you had an inexperienced official who knew (correctly) that your assistant is not allowed to coach while standing during any live ball in the game -- ever; but hasn't learned yet that a T in that situation is not a call we want to "live and die" with. So while no one here (or hopefully in your locker room) will say that this official cost you the game, I think that if the situation happened as you describe it, we could probably agree that the T was not an appropriate call for that point of the ballgame.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Regardless of the "letter of the law", 17 seconds left in a 43-42 game is NOT the time to "prove a point", unless the assistant is way over the top. Problem with that is, if you have let him get away with the behavior for the previous 31 minutes and change, you've "made your bed" and have to lay there.
I agree with Juulie, that this is probably more a case of inexperienced officials, than anything else. A good learning experience however, by ALL parties invovled.
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I do think that Dan ref was out of line with his comments. Do we wonder why some coaches view us as adversaries rather than a moderator? Let's show the guy some respect since he sought us out to help him understand why something happened rather than let his steam build up towards refs.
About the original question, yeah, as mentioned, probably inexperienced. The only T I have ever given for an assistant "standing up" was when he kept whining and was a total pain after warnings to he and the head coach. Maybe there was some of that? |
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