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Had an interesting conversation with one of my cowokers the other day about when you call a foul and the basket goes in. From what we decided, there are two ways to do it. Either you sell the basket right away (which in turn makes it look like you are watching the basket rather than the play) or you wait for confrence with the other official and then signal the basket was made on your way to the table.... which one do you prefer and why?
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I'm with BZ on this one -- why sell it? Either the basket went or it didn't. It's not like convincing a coach that her player did in fact whack the shooter in three different places. You signal the basket as good when you know that it went -- with the preliminary if you see it, or when you report to the table if you wait to be certain. Conferring with your partner is a way to add to your credibility "see, I always do whatever it takes to be sure I get the call right." What's wrong with that?
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Good to see you tonight Juulie! Interesting pair of games, eh? |
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No need to sell that it goes in, you may need to sell a prelim first (block) then just score it how you like. I score it with a fist, with my non foul calling arm.
On another note, there was one time where I had no clue if it went in because the play was carried far under the basket (I was lead) and I stayed with the play. I went to the table to report and they asked me if it counted, I had to double check with C/T and one of them confirmed it went in. I now will let my partner verbally know that it went in if I don't see him give the score it signal. |
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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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Count it as soon as you know it went in. That's usually as soon as it goes in.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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You sell a call when you're sure of the call but it's close and someone else might just be a-doubting ya. It tells the world "Screw you- I got that one right!" On a basket though, it either went in or it didn't go in. |
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You sell a call when you're sure of the call but it's close and someone else might just be a-doubting ya. It tells the world "Screw you- I got that one right!" On a basket though, it either went in or it didn't go in. [/B][/QUOTE] Last night I had a block/charge where, refereeing the defense, it was pretty clear that the defender stepped up after A1 was airborne. Clearly a block. If you were watching the defense. But the defender made it look good to everyone watching the person with the ball (which was everyone else). Whistle/fist, bang my fists on my hips (another non-standard NFHS mechanic), and call out "BLOCK! Count it!" THAT'S what selling a call is. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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