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Situation that happened Friday night that hopefully someone else can learn from.
BV 3-man mechanics. Close game throughout, ends up going into overtime. 16.7 secs left in first overtime tie score visitors with ball table side. Inbound the ball get their shot and miss, Home team rebounds. Here is where the problem starts. Prior to inbounding the ball homes coach says something to me about a timeout(I'm Trail) after made basket. When ball is rebounded I turn for some reason expecting to see a timeout called, there wasn't, problem is I had started to blow my whistle when I turned. Table heard the whistle, benches must have heard it, and a player or two heard it(fairly loud in gym). Since the table heard it he stopped the clock at around 1.2 secs. Then started it again because no one including me reacted to the whistle right away. When I realized what I had done the the home teams shot was away and the clocked stopped at .2 secs. Thank god I was on the game with 2 very veteran officials, one 30 years with multiple state finals and the other 18 years with numerous tournaments. We got together and decided that 2.8 secs on the clock and had home team inbound on the endline (had to go full court). Obviously vistor's coach not happy at all that home will get another shot but I went over and told him it was my fault and I screwed up. Didn't help much but Home's shot didn't go so we continued to the 2nd overtime, Luckily for me. Game ended up going a third overtime before the home team won by 4-5. Talked with partners after the game and they said that when you have an inadvertant whistle you should continue blowing the whistle once you have blown it so that everything stops. Sorry for the length just figured I'd help someone out so that they don't have to go through that situation or at least learn how to handle it. Any comments are welcome. |
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Suggestion:
As that situation was unfolding - loud gym, tight game, Time outs in coach's possession - I think it is positive game management practice to drift by the coach(s) and say "Its loud coach, I need to see a VISUAL time out signal if you will. I might not hear you". I'm amazed at how many sounds roam around a gym that sound like the word "time".
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"Sports do not build character. They reveal it" - Heywood H. Broun "Officiating does not build character. It reveal's it" - Ref Daddy |
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This is, of course, the PERFECT example of why some of us do not like the coach being allowed to request a timeout. The rule before had been only a player on the floor was allowed to request; now we have to divert a little of our attention away from the floor to be aware of the coach's request. I have also granted TO's when I've heard a coach yell for the "Side out!" play. RefDaddy has the right idea in your sitch - if the coach says they're going to want a timeout at some defined point in the future, tell them to make sure they get your attention again, both verbally and visually, so there are no problems with them changing their mind.
I had a situation a couple of weeks ago in a women's game. Team A's coach is known to be rather soft-spoken. We are late in a close game, loud, small gym, and Team A scores. I was T, tableside, and am now new L. I'm starting to turn to go up the court to follow the players, and I hear behind me "Jim! Jim!". I turn around, and it's B's coach trying to get my attention. I get up in front of her, while trying to watch play on the floor, and ask, "What's up?" She says, "Carol (Team A's coach) is trying to get your attention for a timeout." "Huh?" Of course, by the time I turn back around, my partner was already blowing the whistle. We had a chuckle about it, because apparently Carol tried to grab me on the way past trying to get my attention. Oh well.
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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You are so on the case!
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Calling your inbounds play 'side-out' should be a technical foul . . . just kidding, but it is an all night problem when the coach does it. I can't think of a rule that causes more coach-aggravation -they expect an instant response and it can't happen. What I do (having granted a time out to a parent the first year this rule came in) is, upon hearing a coach's plaintive cry for time-out, first, observe is the ball in the control of or at the disposal of a player, and, if so, note the team, then turn to see if it is indeed the head coach of that team who's calling for the time out. If I see that it is, I'll grant the time out - based on my observation from some tenths of a second back. I note this because, at the speed of basketball, by the time I turn and identify the coach and blow my whistle, the status of the ball may have changed - but the time-out dates from the moment I made my observation. I've had a couple cases where a player has shot the ball before the whistle and the coach somehow didn't want the time-out to have happened in time. Of course he would have argued mucho the other way had something nefarious befallen his team . . .
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Sarchasm: the gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the recipient. |
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Here's my latest.....away coach's signal for his full court press is an open hand raised over his head and he wiggles his fingers. This guy chooses to coach from his seat.
4 point game with 20 seconds left and his team hits a 3, as I turn to head up the court, (knowing he might want a TO) I see him get up with raised hand and so I honor his press-signal with a TO. I could tell from his puzzled look that I shouldn't have blown the whistle so I looked at my partner and we put em in play. Oops, but both coaches understood and we all laughed. Like M&M said, because the coach can call the TO and we know the spots where they might want one, we divert our attention from the floor for a moment and situations happen.
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Do you ever feel like your stuff strutted off without you? |
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Quote:
Calling your inbounds play 'side-out' should be a technical foul . . . just kidding, but it is an all night problem when the coach does it. I can't think of a rule that causes more coach-aggravation -they expect an instant response and it can't happen. What I do (having granted a time out to a parent the first year this rule came in) is, upon hearing a coach's plaintive cry for time-out, first, observe is the ball in the control of or at the disposal of a player, and, if so, note the team, then turn to see if it is indeed the head coach of that team who's calling for the time out. If I see that it is, I'll grant the time out - based on my observation a few tenths of a second ago. I note this because, at the speed of basketball, by the time I turn and identify the coach and blow my whistle, the status of the ball may have changed - but the time-out dates from the moment I made my observation. I've had a couple cases where a player has shot the ball before the whistle and the coach somehow didn't want the time-out. Of course he would have argued mucho the other way had something nefarious befallen his team . . .
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Sarchasm: the gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the recipient. |
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Re: You are so on the case!
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Nate |
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In a game earlier this season
we had a coach who had a play called "man out." It is a press break formation. Of course, its late in a tight game, his team has the ball, trying to inbounds against a press (his team had 2 or 3 point lead) and he bounds off the bench yelling "man out, man out." Very loud gym. You know what it sounds like. My partner signals the TO. The coach goes ballistic, because, he had only one TO left. We confer, rescind the TO, put ball immediately into play at POI (to his credit, other coach kept his cool and didn't argue). Afterwards, coach laughed when saying he should probably change the name of the play. DUH!
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All of us learn to write in the second grade. Most of us go on to greater things. |
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"Hear, recognize then award." That is what Ed Hightower told us when this rule was put into place when he was a Rules Interpreter about 7 or 8 years ago.
If you are ever unsure, do not award a timeout. I agree that a coach asking for a timeout is not the best thing for us to do, but that is the rule and I do not see it changing. So we are just going to have to deal with it until it is officially changed. I usually have to hear a coach several times call for a timeout when they are out of my field of vision before I award one. Even when they say, "I want a timeout if the ball goes in." I still tell them to ask me anyway. I do not want there ever to be confusion on my part when I grant a timeout. So far I have not a problem, but the more and more I use that philosophy I have stayed out of trouble (knock, knock). Peace
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I received a request from a member of the NFHS rules committee for suggestions for rule changes to be put in place next season. This was one of the changes I suggested, although I doubt it will be put in place. (If they do change the rule so coaches can't request the TO, I expect to receive cases of Diet Cokes from everyone who complained in this thread
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Quote:
I'd much rather not have to take my eyes away from a play to verify who's requesting the TO.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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