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Would be curious to see some responses to how you'd handle the following situation:
At end of 1st quarter and with no prior incidents involving the Coach, as the 2 officials quickly meet at the center circle before going to their appropriate positions, the Coach is suddenly in the center circle with the officials. He is quite calm and wants to point out something he feels the other team is doing that he would like to have watched. How would you handle and would you handle differently if the Coach paying us the visit is: 1) Head Coach 2) Asst. Coach Thanks |
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Just start walking towards his bench, he'll follow you. When you reach his bench end the conversation with "OK coach, I hear you." Turn & walk away.
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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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[B]Things turn out best for those that make the best out of the way things turn out - John Wooden[B] |
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I do not really agree with the comment about him needing to speak through his captain. At every level, from MS through college, coaches complain the most that referees do not answer their questions or communicate with them. That's why we have the table-side mechanic, so we are in position to answer a coach's questions if need be. Maybe that's why the coach was out there in the first place - he had been trying to get the official's attention and this was the only way they could do it. If a coach is asking questions in a calm way, I'll talk to them all day. If they start getting sarcastic and grumpy (like some members of this forum), I'll nod my head, tell them that's enough, walk away, give them the "stop sign", T, whatever is necessary. But don't tell a coach you're not going to talk to him - that will make him crabbier quicker.
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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Be careful with the "I'll watch it on both ends" comments. I suggest, I'll watch for it" as a better answer. Mentioning "both ends" may be taken as a slap at the coach.
Listen, acknowledge, and move on. We don't need to say anything that might antagonize a coach or player. They know we're watching both ends. If we see the infraction they were complaining about, and it happens to be against their team, they have no basis to complain. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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It's in the manual someplace |
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(I know he wouldn't lie.)
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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Dan_ref - very nice. It's extremely difficult, if not impossible, to argue with silence. Simply walk away and he will definitely follow. No need to tell him why along the way. Once off the floor, then you can say what you need to....clean and effective - very nice game management.
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Call what you SAW...not what you see! |
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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