![]() |
just wondering what everyone else does.... i've been doing the one handed shot put toss for the last few years and it works pretty good for me, but i see a lot doing the 2 handed toss, so i try it the other night, i did a couple of practice tosses in the locker room and went out and tried it in a high school scrimmage game, i think i about hit the ceiling with it, i guess i was worried about getting it high enough and went a little overboard, it was pretty funny!!!! Is there a matter of preference to the 1 or 2 handed toss to Assignors?????
|
I did 1 handed, then I discovered that the spin I got on it would change it's course slightly when it gained hight, so I went to two handed, but I think it's just a personal feeling and touch deciding
|
Never heard of anyone caring how many hands are used...so long as it's straight and goes the right height. I use one.
Z |
I use one hand and sometime two.
|
1 handed toss, no whistle. :)
|
Two
I use both hands. I have been to camps where they only teach the one handed toss, it just does not work for me.
Peace |
I use one and toss underhand. Someone suggested that I try overhand (hold ball like a waiter holding a tray above his/her head to toss) and I'm considering switching, as tossing that way does appear to have less variability from toss to toss.
|
I go one handed. To work on it, I stand by a basket and toss the ball so it goes a little above the rim and doesn't touch it. Someone showed me that as a slick way to practice once.
|
3 hands here.
|
I bounce the ball off the floor. It has to go a little high though because the players aren't expecting it, have to give them a little time to gather themselves.
|
I am a 2 handed tosser, I was thinking about trying to switch to 1 handed to give me a hand to protect myself with.
|
Quote:
1 hands, 2 hands, who cares? Do assignors really care about such crap? Actually, I take that rhetorical question back. At a provincial finals tournament, I was once told to not touch my elbow as I report the # of FTs a player gets. ::rolleyes:: |
Definitely a one hander. It works for me so I'm not fixin' what ain't broke.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
But I'm a one hander. |
Quote:
|
I use two hands, it works well for me.
|
I use one hand. At 6'8" I only have to toss it about a foot. Also, just seems to be easier to get out of the way.
|
I usually tell the players just before the jump..."Hold your spots, good luck, is that britney spears?" Then I toss it...most of the time, they are still looking into the stands by the time the ball comes back down. I even use the briteny spears line for the girls too...
|
I'm a one hander myself........
|
One handed overhand toss, no rotation. Seems to work well for me, which I think is the most important.
|
Quote:
Z |
Quote:
It also depends on the level you are officiating. This is more for the Varsity level & higher. It really doesn't matter what you do at the lower levels. |
Tips for the Jump Ball
Here's a story I posted a couple years ago from camp. I worked a game and was observed by J.B. Caldwell.
The tap was stolen and neither of partners called it. I thought it was stolen, but didn't have the best look from right underneath, plus I didn't have the whistle in my mouth. So after the game, J.B. comes in and says to me, "The tap was stolen. They should've blown it dead, but I put the responsibility for that on you." He then gave me some good tips for keeping the jumpers from getting a quick read on the toss. He said that no matter where the two jumpers are positioned, he asks both of them to back up a couple inches. This give him a little space to get between them, but more importantly, it takes them out of their comfort zone. He talks to them as they're repositioning. He says, "Let it go all the way up; I'm gonna give both of you a fair shot to get to it." Then he varies his rhythm for the toss. Sometimes he'll bounce it first, sometimes not. Sometimes he'll toss it right away, sometimes he holds onto it for an extra second or two. He basically doesn't want anybody to get too comfortable with timing his toss. |
I had a board member who cared. Although that's a statistically insignificant sample, he had a good point. If you do an underhand toss, the ball has to travel farther. Any small error in the angle of the toss will be magnified by the distance it has to travel. His recommendation: either two-hand toss it (which I do now) or shot put it.
Chuck, thanks for the idea about scooting the players back. I usually start outside the circle, whistle, march smartly into the circle and toss it quickly. If the players are too close together, I'm in trouble. I think I'll try the approach you suggest. |
Couple of years ago Basketball Australia (our governing body) sent out an instruction that all referees were to use a two handed toss, and not to have the whistle in their mouths.
On a tangent - since the introduction of the possession arrow, I have noticed many more referees having to re-toss the ball due to their error. Maybe this is because we now only do one jump ball per game, so it is a skill that is being lost.....any thoughts? |
Quote:
|
I do the one handed toss starting from about the head. If I do the two handed or underhand toss I have to start too low and the players then seem to get in the way. I like to start my throw as high as possible.
I do that practice toss as well but I practice inside the hoop as I can guage how straight it is by throwing it into the hoop. -------------------------------------------------------------- Once there was an official who tossed the tip all the way between the rafters. At half-time the second official questioned him about it and he said, "Yeah, my fly was unzipped. While everyone was watching the ball I bent down and zipped up my fly." :) A story I heard |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:51pm. |