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ChuckElias Sat Dec 24, 2005 03:30pm

Varsity head coach comes to you during the JV game. Here's his tale of woe. "One of our players forgot his game jersey. There's no way that we're going to get it for the game. We'd like him to wear a JV jersey, but the JV jerseys are purple and the Varsity jerseys are black. So he'll be wearing a different color. Can he wear it if we take a T for it?"

This was shared with me over pizza and Diet Cokes last night. What would you do? Allow him to buy his way into the game with a T? Or not allow the jersey at all?

If it matters to your decision, the home team's Varsity jerseys were white. He's definitely going to play and he can't borrow one from a bench-warmer b/c they have a short bench and everyone is going to play.

This was a HS game, btw. If the answer is different for NCAA, I'd be interested to hear that, too.

Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. Sat Dec 24, 2005 03:43pm

Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Varsity head coach comes to you during the JV game. Here's his tale of woe. "One of our players forgot his game jersey. There's no way that we're going to get it for the game. We'd like him to wear a JV jersey, but the JV jerseys are purple and the Varsity jerseys are black. So he'll be wearing a different color. Can he wear it if we take a T for it?"

This was shared with me over pizza and Diet Cokes last night. What would you do? Allow him to buy his way into the game with a T? Or not allow the jersey at all?

If it matters to your decision, the home team's Varsity jerseys were white. He's definitely going to play and he can't borrow one from a bench-warmer b/c they have a short bench and everyone is going to play.

This was a HS game, btw. If the answer is different for NCAA, I'd be interested to hear that, too.


Chuck:

I don't have the time to research an NCAA answer for you right now, but I would be inclined to tell the Coach V that the player's jersey looked good to me. The intent of the rule is to keep a team from deceiving its opponent. I cannot see how Team V would be deceivng its opponent in this situation.

Merry Christmas!

MTD, Sr.

BktBallRef Sat Dec 24, 2005 04:03pm

Quote:

Originally posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr.
Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Varsity head coach comes to you during the JV game. Here's his tale of woe. "One of our players forgot his game jersey. There's no way that we're going to get it for the game. We'd like him to wear a JV jersey, but the JV jerseys are purple and the Varsity jerseys are black. So he'll be wearing a different color. Can he wear it if we take a T for it?"

This was shared with me over pizza and Diet Cokes last night. What would you do? Allow him to buy his way into the game with a T? Or not allow the jersey at all?

If it matters to your decision, the home team's Varsity jerseys were white. He's definitely going to play and he can't borrow one from a bench-warmer b/c they have a short bench and everyone is going to play.

This was a HS game, btw. If the answer is different for NCAA, I'd be interested to hear that, too.


Chuck:

I don't have the time to research an NCAA answer for you right now, but I would be inclined to tell the Coach V that the player's jersey looked good to me. The intent of the rule is to keep a team from deceiving its opponent. I cannot see how Team V would be deceivng its opponent in this situation.

Merry Christmas!

MTD, Sr.

Wow! Mark must be mellowing in his old age! :)

Ref Daddy Sat Dec 24, 2005 04:47pm


had similiar situation in lower level this year.

We asked the opposign coach in front of the ohter coach pre-game _ "Coach, Do you have any objection to the uniform"?

Best to clear it up early before competition starts.

In our case it was that the school was short exactly similiar jerseys and they were noticable (grey v silver) off in color.

Felt like the appropriate thing to do, and all party's were happy.

Jurassic Referee Sat Dec 24, 2005 04:52pm

Light purple or dark purple?

Mauve?

Who gives a sh!t. Let the kid play. Nobody's gonna confuse the colors out there and gain any kind of an uinfair advantage from it, as MTD Sr. said.

Don't be an OOO.

zebraman Sat Dec 24, 2005 05:30pm

As long as the jersey is easily distinguishable from the opponent's jersey, let the kid play.

Z

bob jenkins Sat Dec 24, 2005 11:09pm

Apply 3.3.6A (2004-2005 reference) and allow the different shirt, as long as it doesn't cause a duplicate number (and, imo, find some way to alter the number so it's not a duplicate).

Nevadaref Sun Dec 25, 2005 02:47am

NFHS ruling
 
Strict reading of the rule book is that this is an illegal shirt. 3-4-6 says, "The torso of the team jersey shall be the same single solid color from the base of the neck to the bottom of the team jersey."

Therefore, the jerseys of each team member are supposed to be the same single solid color.

Illegal shirts are allowed to be used at the cost of a player technical foul.

Of course, there certainly is an exception which allows a player to change a torn shirt or one which has excessive blood on it to a jersey that is similar in color to the team jersey without penalty.

However, forgetting a game jersey is not the same as having it become unusable. There is a responsibility issue involved. We should ask what life lessons are we trying to teach through HS athletics?

Would I assess the T or allow the kid to play with penalty? I guess that would depend upon how close to Christmas the game is being played. :)
Either way the kid is going to be able to participate.


Nevadaref Sun Dec 25, 2005 02:59am

NCAA ruling
 
RULE 3/PLAYERS, SUBSTITUTES AND PLAYER EQUIPMENT
BR-61
Section 5. Uniforms
...
Art. 2. Game jerseys shall be of the same single solid color.
...
Art. 4. The color, style and design of all teammatesÂ’ game jerseys and game pants shall be alike.

RULE 10/FOULS AND PENALTIES
Section 3. Indirect Technical Fouls
BR-137
Art. 11.Wearing an illegal game jersey.
a. Penalize offender with a single indirect technical foul whenever discovered before the ball becomes live.
b. When a violation is committed by more than one member of a team, it shall be assessed with a single indirect technical foul.

mick Sun Dec 25, 2005 10:29am

There are plenty of reasons to allow one player to play the game. If two, or three, ...or five players come in different colored *dark* jerseys, you just call it rec ball.

Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. Sun Dec 25, 2005 10:38pm

Quote:

Originally posted by BktBallRef
Quote:

Originally posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr.
Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Varsity head coach comes to you during the JV game. Here's his tale of woe. "One of our players forgot his game jersey. There's no way that we're going to get it for the game. We'd like him to wear a JV jersey, but the JV jerseys are purple and the Varsity jerseys are black. So he'll be wearing a different color. Can he wear it if we take a T for it?"

This was shared with me over pizza and Diet Cokes last night. What would you do? Allow him to buy his way into the game with a T? Or not allow the jersey at all?

If it matters to your decision, the home team's Varsity jerseys were white. He's definitely going to play and he can't borrow one from a bench-warmer b/c they have a short bench and everyone is going to play.

This was a HS game, btw. If the answer is different for NCAA, I'd be interested to hear that, too.


Chuck:

I don't have the time to research an NCAA answer for you right now, but I would be inclined to tell the Coach V that the player's jersey looked good to me. The intent of the rule is to keep a team from deceiving its opponent. I cannot see how Team V would be deceivng its opponent in this situation.

Merry Christmas!

MTD, Sr.

Wow! Mark must be mellowing in his old age! :)


Tis the Season to be Mary (Struckhoff) , oops, I mean Merry. Merry Christmas!

MTD, Sr.

rainmaker Mon Dec 26, 2005 01:30am

Quote:

Originally posted by Ref Daddy
and all party's were happy.

...except Mr. Grammar Guy.

ChuckElias Tue Dec 27, 2005 08:04am

Re: NFHS ruling
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Nevadaref
Strict reading of the rule book is that this is an illegal shirt. 3-4-6 says, "The torso of the team jersey shall be the same single solid color from the base of the neck to the bottom of the team jersey."

Therefore, the jerseys of each team member are supposed to be the same single solid color.

I just don't see that inference, Nevada. There's no rule or definition of "team jersey" as the identical shirts as the rest of the team. "Team jersey" might simply mean the same thing as "game jersey", which is how I've always taken it.

Our pizza group sided with the majority here. No rule mandates that all game jerseys be the same color. Let the kid play with no penalty, as long as it's not confusing to the opponents.

Back In The Saddle Tue Dec 27, 2005 11:48am

In reading the rule the only inference I can find to support "all jerseys have to be the same color", other than the light color/dark color is the fact that the section is titled Uniforms.

According to the dictionary, one definition of uniform is: Unvaried in texture, color, or design.

But another is: A distinctive outfit intended to identify those who wear it as members of a specific group.

So as long as it distinctly identifies the player as being part of that player's team, it seems to be legal in every respect.

Camron Rust Tue Dec 27, 2005 05:41pm

Re: Re: NFHS ruling
 
Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:

Originally posted by Nevadaref
Strict reading of the rule book is that this is an illegal shirt. 3-4-6 says, "The torso of the team jersey shall be the same single solid color from the base of the neck to the bottom of the team jersey."

Therefore, the jerseys of each team member are supposed to be the same single solid color.

I just don't see that inference, Nevada. There's no rule or definition of "team jersey" as the identical shirts as the rest of the team. "Team jersey" might simply mean the same thing as "game jersey", which is how I've always taken it.

Our pizza group sided with the majority here. No rule mandates that all game jerseys be the same color. Let the kid play with no penalty, as long as it's not confusing to the opponents.

While I'd let the kid play, the definition of the word "uniform" is that they are the same....including color. If the word uniform is used in describing the outfit, then it is implied that each player must be dressed in the same color/style shirt and shorts.

ChuckElias Wed Dec 28, 2005 08:49am

Re: Re: Re: NFHS ruling
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Camron Rust
While I'd let the kid play, the definition of the word "uniform" is that they are the same....including color. If the word uniform is used in describing the outfit, then it is implied that each player must be dressed in the same color/style shirt and shorts.
But that's not how we enforce it, is it? If the new varsity jerseys have white piping on the seams, but one kid is wearing last year's jersey without the white piping, do we penalize? I don't think so; at least, I'm sure I wouldn't.

I think BITS's comment is most appropriate: the "uniform" is simply a distinctive outfit.

lmeadski Wed Dec 28, 2005 09:12am

If you let him play
 
with the dis-similar jersey, do you still T him up?

ChuckElias Wed Dec 28, 2005 09:39am

Re: If you let him play
 
Quote:

Originally posted by lmeadski
with the dis-similar jersey, do you still T him up?
No, meadski. There is no requirement that all the game jerseys be identical. (Unless you follow Nevada's inference.)

Jimgolf Wed Dec 28, 2005 09:47am

Have they added a requirement about shorts to HS rules, or are you just referring to the NCAA rules quoted?

I thought NF rules only mention jerseys.

Nevadaref Wed Dec 28, 2005 10:14am

NFHS doesn't specify about the shorts. As far as I know they can all be different colors. I don't like this, but I don't have rules support to rule differently.

However, when it comes to the jerseys, I believe that I do.

As for Chuck's pizza group, I respect their opinion. I just think that they had one too many pitchers while formulating it. ;)

I believe that the clear intent of a "team" jersey is for all of them to be the same. That is the concept of a "team" anything.
I'm not advocating being overly strict on the enforcement of this, but to deny that according to the rules each team member is to wear the same color jersey is off base in my opinion.


Chuck, you'll have to check with you pizza buddies on this, but if we aren't going to require the shirts to be the some color, why even have team jerseys?

We could just allow the kids to show up in their favorite NBA throwback jersey. As long as all the kids from the home side have light colored ones (gold, white, silver, grey) and the visitors have dark (blue, green, red, black) everything should be great, right? Oh, wait, they have to make sure that each one has a different number. :)


Mark Dexter Wed Dec 28, 2005 10:30am

Quote:

Originally posted by Nevadaref

We could just allow the kids to show up in their favorite NBA throwback jersey. As long as all the kids from the home side have light colored ones (gold, white, silver, grey) and the visitors have dark (blue, green, red, black) everything should be great, right? Oh, wait, they have to make sure that each one has a different number. :)


We call that "intramurals" or "rec ball" . . .

Camron Rust Wed Dec 28, 2005 02:07pm

Re: Re: Re: Re: NFHS ruling
 
Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:

Originally posted by Camron Rust
While I'd let the kid play, the definition of the word "uniform" is that they are the same....including color. If the word uniform is used in describing the outfit, then it is implied that each player must be dressed in the same color/style shirt and shorts.
But that's not how we enforce it, is it? If the new varsity jerseys have white piping on the seams, but one kid is wearing last year's jersey without the white piping, do we penalize? I don't think so; at least, I'm sure I wouldn't.

I think BITS's comment is most appropriate: the "uniform" is simply a distinctive outfit.

I think they should be very similar. The presence of a trim color or not is insignificant. The main color of the shirt is significant. The shades should be close. If one team is in white and the other royal blue, I don't think a red jersey would be adequate but a navy blue or other similar blue would be.


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