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Re: Re: Re: Re: Well............
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As I said, I think it's a violation but if I'm on the floor, I'll probably tell B's coach that I thought it was a shot. :) |
Re: Judgement
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Re: The following people care
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2- Officials who have to book their own schedule with athletic directors and coaches. 3- Booking supervisors who ears are constantly getting bent by coaches who don't understand the rules. 4- Officials who work for booking supervisors who are constantly getting the ears bent about their officiating, be those remarks justified or not. It's pretty easy and arrogant to say, "Who cares what the coach claims?" But the fact is that they are part of the game and they do affect the game and the officials. You can't make the call based on what the coach thinks but you can't just dismiss Rut's point. When we make a call, we need to make sure it's the proper call. When there's a question about a play, such as this one, sometimes it's better to not go by the letter of the rule, especially when the rule isn't clear. |
Re: Well............
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As far as the ball going in the basket from behind the line, I don't believe they are saying it is a try, I believe it is simply to be counted as 3...not unlike a team putting the ball in the other team's basket. It's not a try, but it still counts as if it were one if it goes in while live. Any fouls that occur during such action would not be shooting fouls. |
Re: Re: The following people care
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Just my two cents... |
Re: Re: Re: The following people care
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I must say that when I posted this, I didn't think it was going to turn into a discussion on the amount of attention an official should pay to what coaches think, but rather a discussion of the play itself.
In the case I described, there is no doubt the ball hit the board on a pass, not a try. The play is identical to one tried previously on more than one occasion in the game. My advice is to make the correct call according to the rule, which is over and back, then tell any complaining coach that you will explain it at the next break. Period. BTW - this was a set play in the NBA years ago when Jack Ramsey was coaching the Blazers. He ran it for Calvin Natt. After trying it for a few games and having it work only about 20% of the time, they abandoned it. Frankly, I think it could work at that level with the proper personnel, although if a forward could get inside position that easily, and a guard can make that pass that easily, maybe you're better off with an alley-oop. |
Re: Re: The following people care
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