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Your partner probably should have gotten him when he was belligerent the first time, and definitely the second time.
By the time you got him your partner had warned him twice and you warned him once, and that is two too many, IMO. |
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Your partner should have spared you the trouble. One warning is all it should take. Thanks DAvid |
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I can't help it -- most coaches can be talked to and reasoned with at the varsity level and therefore some that can't be reasoned with get a little more rope than they should get. I'd rather it be that way -- when I write the report, it's clear that we gave him the rope, but he built the noose and slipped inside. Truth is, most varsity coaches around know how to act, so it's a bit surprising when we get one that doesn't. [Edited by Rich Fronheiser on Feb 1st, 2005 at 01:09 AM] |
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Rich-
Have you ever discussed T'ing in a pregame? How about at half time? I just whacked my first coach last saturday. My partner and I discussed how to deal with him in the second half at halftime (we hadnt yet rung him up). I found that helpful. Any thoughts are appreciated. Clark |
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Keep in mind that I'm not being critical of you, just looking at the situation in general, for those without 18 years under their belt. ![]() |
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How you handle giving warnings, communicating warnings that have been given, and enforcing them should all be a part of your pregame. |
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I wish.
I'm lucky to get a partner that wants to have any pregame. When I have gotten to be R I try to do a pregame, but usually I am just waiting for my partner. And then it is "yeah, yeah, yeah." I have had a few real good pregames when I get a squared away partner. Those are the best. For me, as a newbie, it helps me and it gets me in the basketball frame of mind so that it doesnt take me 5 plays before I am focused and in the zone. What, exactly, do you put in your pregame about Ts? For my information...if you dont mind. Clark |
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Warnings, what will earn one, how we will communicate after giving one, how we will follow up on those warnings.
Technicals, what is automatic, what we will do as a crew after giving a T, who will administer the FTs, who will talk to the coach, how to remain calm and regain focus, coach/player managment post T, double Ts and player managment/fight control. Doing the lower level games can make pregames tough, do the best you can before you go on the floor. Cheat a bit during warm ups and sneak in some more then. Get together at timeouts to deal with in game stuff and game situations, and fully use the half to get on the same page. |
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Rule 10-4-1(b)-"Bench personnel shall not attempt to influence an official's decisions. For any coaches reading this--you're taking your chances if you wanna continually try to "work" an official. Don't whine if you get nailed. And remember, the rule doesn't provide for a warning either. You usually get a warning only because we're such nice people. Edited to add: "Btw, good "T", Rich. That may help the next set of officials that have to put up with this goof". [Edited by Jurassic Referee on Feb 1st, 2005 at 07:22 AM] |
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Most people that get technicals exhibit the "required" behavior early. |
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__________________
Never argue with an idiot. He will bring you down to his level and beat you with experience. |
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