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Not sure were you are coming from, I thought we were both on the same page. ![]() I don't understand your double whistle with the C (if you are L), if you trust your C, just let him/her make or pass on the call. |
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yes we are both on the same page what i am saying is if we both blow our whistle I let them take the call.
if i am the L
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Be Part of the Game, Don't Be the Game!!!!! 15 Year OHSAA BASKETBALL OFFICIAL 10 Year NSA Umpire |
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The reason it's a double foul is because that exact play is listed in the casebook, and that is how we are told to call it. 4.19.7(c). If one official signals a block, and the other official signals a charge, it results in a double personal. It also says "Even though airborne shooter A1 committed a a charging foul, it is not a player-control foul because the two fouls result in a double personal foul". The basket counts, and you go to an AP throw-in. Try to explain to B's coach why you called a foul on the shooter A1, but the basket still counts, AND A gets the ball back as well because they happen to have the arrow. Obviously, you and your partners want to avoid this. The best way to avoid it is to learn how to just hold up a fist, rather than making the signal quickly on the spot. We can get together and come out with a single call, we can make eye contact with our partner and either give it up or come in strong and say, "I'll take it!". These all need to be pre-gamed. But, the casebook tells us specifically what to do if there are conflicting signals. So, we can't just say we won't do it because we don't like it. What if I don't like when the warning horns for timeouts are? I don't get to do something different just because I don't think it's fair. So, if you don't want to call a double foul in this situation, don't call two different fouls.
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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-thanks to those who pointed out my faulty administration of the penalty. I was thinking of 4.19.8 (false double foul). |
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And i understand what the case book says if you both signal, but you have to be observant enough to se your partners hand go up. Or hear that whistle and say delay that signal until you and your partner have made eye contact. Normally one of you saw what happend first. Especially if the play is coming toward the L and the T calls it with the L. I am not and never will go against what it says in the case book or rule book, I just gues i am talking more abt communication with your partners.
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Be Part of the Game, Don't Be the Game!!!!! 15 Year OHSAA BASKETBALL OFFICIAL 10 Year NSA Umpire |
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how can you have a double foul here
this is not like 2 post players fighting for position and they each push and dislodge each other --
If you have a blocking foul on the defense HOW can you have a simultaneous charge??? If the offensive player commited a charge then how can you have a blocking foul since the defender HAD LEGAL guarding position (which is why it was a foul)?? This is a situation where you guys get together and Whoever's primary it was steps up and says "I got this" and the other one has to bow down and if a coach says "Well you had this......" that's when you reply "It was in his primary and he had a better angle on the play" and move on. Who cares if you both made different signals -- its either a block or a charge -- I dont see how these 2 could happen simultaneously ever. |
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Re: how can you have a double foul here
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Re: how can you have a double foul here
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Ok, here's the play: team A is down 2 with 5 sec. left. They have the arrow. A1 drives the lane, and there's a big collision. You signal charge, your partner signals block. You each look up and go, "oh, sh!t". You get together, figure out it was in your primary, and you go take the call. Charge on A1, B gets the ball OOB. Sounds like the right thing to do. Buuuuut...what if you get a smart coach who knows the rules? (Ok, I know, it doesn't happen often... ![]() Another example: A1 is dribbling while being closely guarded. B1 tips the ball away and it is about to be picked up by B2 who has a clear breakaway. Your partner (the same rookie who made the blarge call last game...) blows his whistle because A's coach asks for a TO. You get together, realize it's an inadvertant whistle, and give the ball back to A. In addition, A now gets that TO if they still want it. So, B loses a breakaway AND A gets a TO they weren't initially entitled to because of an official's error. Not fair? Of course not, but that's the way the rules are written. So, don't think of the play actually being both a block and a charge, but look at it as an official's error. The rules spell out what happens if they screw up. If we don't want to be embarrased by applying the casebook play, then we shouldn't be making two different signals.
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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Nor should we be screwing up by awarding FTs on a double foul because then we would have to be really embarrassed by using the correctable error rule. ![]() |
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Like I told Juulie before - listen to what I mean, not what I say.
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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