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I was at a camp over memorial weekend and had a varsity/college official evaluated me and gave me some great advice about philosophy of the game and game management and I learn a lot from him. Last year he has seen me at a camp and evaluated me and has told me that my arm is not straight enough and that I have not made any improvement from the last time he seen me.
He told me that my arm is not straight enough when I make my calls for fouls and violation. I have tried to make it straighter during rec. league but seem like I cant do it. When I make my call my arm goes up toward the 2 oclock or 10 oclock, he wants it up toward the 12 oclock. I dont know if I can break this habit if that is whats going to hold me back to the next level. Is this something that you evaluators look at when evaluating? What can I do to fix this habit if that is going to hurt my chances to the next level? By the way this evaluator is also the president of our association and he is the one who will make that decision whether am ready to move up or not. |
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It could be something that could hold you back. Yes, it is his job to look at your skills and tell you what you are doing wrong. Im going to be blunt. Dont make excuses, take what he says and do it. Thats the best thing to do. Good Luck
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Brandan M. Trahan Lafayette, LA |
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2) Think, and practice, "bicep to the ear." Especially in summer ball, hold the arm, and then move it straight up, if needed. As you get used to where it "should be", you'll start putting it there in the first place. |
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Definitely fix it...it just looks lazy and sloppy...even if you're not. Not only does it look better at 12 o'clock, it's a bit higher and easier for your partner to see over the players.
It shouldn't be physically hard to do unless your arms are as thick as a 100 year-old oak or you head is the size of the giant pumpkin. If you really concentrate, thoese are the kind of things that take a couple of games to flush out.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Make sure every time you call a foul or violation you hit the side of your head with your arm. If you work on it for a while it will become a habit. As an evaluator, mechanics are the 1st thing I notice. It's difficult to get past sloppy mechanics to see the rest of an official's skills.
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"Never mistake activity for achievement." |
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Ways to fix it --
Watch another ref that does it right. Then before your game, put yourself into a "Johnny Jones" frame of mind. Walk like Johnny Jones, signal like Johnny Jones, tweet like Johnny Jones. What you're doing is performance art. Think of it that way. Think of it as a dance. You need to have the right combination of crispness and relaxed confidence. Right now you don't. You just look sloppy. Find the balance. At home practice in front of the TV. Watch a game tape, and blow when they do. Practice going directly to the correct position. Are you old enough to remember Abby Hoffman and the Black Panthers? Think of their fists over their heads. It was ALWAYS 12 o'clock. Make a statement! ... like they did. Hey that's a foul! Right on! Ref Power! |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Practice all of your mechanics in front of the mirror. What is perfect in the mirror will not be perfect during a game but will be better.
Do you lock your elbow? Allow yourself a little bend in the elbow and have more of a strong hammer slightly in front of your face. This would be a way to begin to have a straight arm. It will look stronger sort of like an NBA official. This will look straighter to an evaluator that is looking at you from the front. Find a comfort zone for you. You might take small elements of someone else's mechanics to make your own. Play with what works best for you and still satisfies your evaluator. I really mean play with it! The more you do this in front of a mirror the more you will be able to control what mechanics you use.
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"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are." -- John Wooden |
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Don't get me wrong, mechanics are important, just not the most important thing.
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Get it right! 1999 (2x), 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2019 |
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I agree practice is important. I try and imagine that I am holding a nail in my hand and want to stick it in the wall as high as I can. I am not sure if you and picture that but it really helps me with C. Elias's suggestion of keeping your knuckles towards your head. It also helps to me to get my hand straight up. This really only works for foul calls as you need a closed fist to jam in the nail.
Just a trick that works for me. |
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I'm also old enough to remember when dirt was invented. BTW - I once met Abby Hoffman - really.
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Yom HaShoah |
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9-11-01 http://www.fallenheroesfund.org/fallenheroes/index.php http://www.carydufour.com/marinemoms...llowribbon.jpg |
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