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Had a similar situation on saturday. Late in the game, under 30 seconds... Coach wants a foul and instead, my partner comes out with a jump ball. Coach is still screaming for a foul. I get close to him and say "Check the possession arrow. Sill want a foul called?" He says, "no... well maybe on them!" LOL!
[Edited by ThickSkin on Jan 30th, 2006 at 11:10 AM]
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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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[QUOTE]Originally posted by rainmaker
[B]My personal favorite is the coach who screams, "And one!" On every shot by his players, even if there's not a defender within 10 yards. I had a game last week when one teams players would holler "and one" on every drive and shot. My partner told them he did not want to hear it said again. It worked so well I added it to my pre-game.
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Failure is fertile ground on which to plant new seeds. |
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Heard a new one over the weekend, but it wasn't aimed at the officials. Coach yelling to his guards who were trying to spin the ball around the perimeter to a 3-point shot in the corner - "You gotta do it quicklier."
Next dead ball I was in front of that bench, looked at the coaches and just said, "Quicklier?" Players, coaches and nearby fans all lost it! |
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It's very important to understand that body language is very flexible in its meaning. Gestures need to be analyzed in concert with floor play.
Prime example - take the very common yet versatile two-arms-extended-shoulder-shrug move. When my players are on offense in the paint, I'm sure this gesture means, "Aw c'mon, where's the FOUL!" But this great expression takes on an entirely different meaning at the other end of the floor when we are defending. Clearly, it means, "What? What was that? Aw c'mon, he hardly touched him!" See - one gesture, very different meanings... ![]() (coach sneaks back to the coaching box hoping not to get slapped with a T)
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There are two kinds of fools: One says, “This is old, therefore it is good”; the other says, “This is new, therefore it is better.” - W.R. Inge |
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Quote:
Coach: Fouls are 9-3. (Her team had committed 9.) Me: Yes, well the score is tied at 26, and that's the number used to decide who wins the game. ![]() |
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Quote:
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Never hit a piñata if you see hornets flying out of it. |
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Had this one last Sat. (college game) - haftime horn has just sounded; visiting coach walking off the floor yells - "they're fouling us on every possession!"......his team was leading 34-30 and the foul count was 8 (home) to 3 (visitors).
Earlier in the first half, after calling a fouling on the home team, the same visiting coach was yelling at me: "they fouled my guy 3 times during that possession". He wanted to argue with me that the foul I called wasn't good enough.....go figure. |
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Especially on the handcheck/push in the back on the drive. They scream "FOUL" as their player drives around the defender to the basket. The when the foul is called and their player is shooting two shots, "Good call, ref." Other end of the floor, "No, it was on the floor before the shot!"
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Nature gave men two ends - one to sit on and one to think with. Ever since then man's success or failure has been dependent on the one he used most. -- George R. Kirkpatrick |
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I can't believe no one has included a version of "Call it both ways!". Closely akin to "That was the same play on the other end and you did/did not call a foul".
I also like "What did he say/do?!" when we have called a common or technical foul on a player, yet everyone sees or hears what the foul was for. And last, let us not forget the coach whose player has just knocked another player to the ground by jumping into an opposing offensive player. This coach can surely be found standing silently with wide eyes and arms extended straight up in the air... |
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