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Same old, same old Scrapy. Just re-inventing the wheel, is all.:rolleyes: Btw, they're were teaching the concept in college camps long before the NBA changed their rule re: clutching and grabbing. Believe it or not, even lowly high school officials were using and teaching the exact same concept a long time ago. |
If as a defender I'm allowed to _______________ the dribbler, I gain an advantage:
a. keep my hand on b. touch off and on multiple times c. place my arm on d. touch with both hands (or one forearm and one hand, or both forearms) e. one-touch "size up" (like touching a hot stove--one time quick on and off) f. a, b, c, and d g. all of the above I'd answer "F".....and call a hand check. Do it consistently and early, and the players and coaches will adjust. It will clean up play and take a lot fo the "gray area" guessing out. Many coaches I know coach their players to use their hands and arms until the officials call a hand-check 2 or 3 times so that the coaches and players can identify where the line is going to be drawn in that particular game. |
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Same old, same old...... |
On the other side of the coin - as a former coach of 15 years - I always taught my kids two things - 1) to hand check 2) to reach. Nothing blatant, but during drills you'd hear me yelling "reach on purpose" and "hands on". Before I get castigated for teaching kids to break the rules - the reason it to teach over aggressivness. It's teaching them the limits - it's the officials job to see that they obey the rules or penalize them according to the rules. What I have found is most officials will call it between 3 and 6 times and then they become accustomed to it and stop calling it. My teams were always known as teams that played defense very hard and aggressive rather than a team that reached and hand-checked.
Now that I'm an official - knowing how I was - I wear my whistle out on it! LOL |
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I realize that you don't have a clue when it comes to high school rules. That's kind of forgivable because, as per your own admission, you'd never done a high school game of any kind in your life up until this current season. And you probably still haven't. Trust me though, the FED sureasheck <b>has</b> issued concrete handcheck guidelines. But....you also told us that you're an NCAA college official. If so, don't you own an NCAA rule book? If you do, take a look on p.184. Be damned if that page isn't labelled and doesn't talk about <b>"handchecking"</b>. :eek: Also, if you go to eofficials.com, you can watch the <b>2006-07 Men's Basketball Officiating Instructional Video- Chapter 6 - Handchecking</b>, as put out by the NCAA for all of it's officials. I would imagine that most real NCAA officials have already seen it and used it as part of their training already. No concrete handcheck guidelines? Lah me...... |
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Peace |
I agree with Rut. Putting two hands on a ball handler is an awkward movement and might lead to getting burnt. This where that patient whistle comes in handy. Maybe I should hold my whistle in my hand in my next JV game just to force me to be patient. :)
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