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Just a rant, really. This is a topic that I just read a question about over on the slum board. A player muffs a pass, it goes through his hands to the floor. He picks it up and dribbles away. NO CALL, NOT A DOUBLE DRIBBLE. I see my fellow officials calling this way too often. I was myself guilty of it last year, before you guys straightened me out. My girlfriend is a varsity coach and in comparing notes after last Friday night's game she questioned my knowledge of the rules. After she came to, she explained that a ref had called this on her player 3 times that night. We all miss calls, but 3 times, he obviously has a misconception about this situation.
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Another misapplication is the fumbling catch travel. You gotta hold the ball at some point before you can travel. Even the two non-holding travel scenarios that Tony posted require that you initially hold the ball (1) self-pass that never hits ground and is not a try on goal and 2) setting ball on floor while down then standing up and picking ball back up).
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"...as cool as the other side of the pillow." - Stuart Scott "You should never be proud of doing the right thing." - Dean Smith |
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DevDog69:
I think that you should give your girl friend an ultimatum: either she comes over from the Dark Side and become a practicing basketball official or at least become a basketball official because as my very successful high school coach (who was also a OhioHSAA registered basketball official), if you do not know the rules you cannot teach the sport to the players.
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Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. Trumbull Co. (Warren, Ohio) Bkb. Off. Assn. Wood Co. (Bowling Green, Ohio) Bkb. Off. Assn. Ohio Assn. of Basketball Officials International Assn. of Approved Bkb. Officials Ohio High School Athletic Association Toledo, Ohio |
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The best way for a coach to learn the rules/officiating knowledge that we both talk about, is to become an official.
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Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. Trumbull Co. (Warren, Ohio) Bkb. Off. Assn. Wood Co. (Bowling Green, Ohio) Bkb. Off. Assn. Ohio Assn. of Basketball Officials International Assn. of Approved Bkb. Officials Ohio High School Athletic Association Toledo, Ohio |
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While becoming an official may be the best way to accomplish this task in the fullest, it is also the most time-consuming. I have never officiated, never intend to do so. I coach 80 games per year and at least that many practices. I support our club tournaments by helping keep things on schedule, working table, etc. I go to tryouts a couple of times a year, recruit players, attend some of my players school team games to support them, etc.
Do you really want me officiating and doing 2-3 games a year? I would suck! Knowing the rules and interpretations and teaching them are far different than being able to referee a game. If I could put the time into reffing that I put into coaching, I have no doubt that I could learn to do it well. But I have only so much free time and I spend some of it coaching and the rest with my family (who never see me when I am away coaching). I can't and won't put the time needed in to be a decent ref, and I won't do it halfways because it's not fair to anyone who gets my games (and I wouldn't be qualified to ref the level I coach, let alone the level I want to coach, so what would I really learn!) |
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My Greatest Call? I Trusted Christ! |
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I apologize if my scenario wasn't clear. A player is receiving a pass and his defender has a play on the ball as well. To avoid having the ball stolen, he bats the ball to the ground as opposed to catching it. The ball bounces once then he catches it. Does he still have his dribble? I lean towards "no" in this case.
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My Greatest Call? I Trusted Christ! |
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Back to the coach vs official thing. My wife is a high school coach with about 18 years experience. Before that she played high school and some small college ball. She is the reason I started officiating. First it was to help her referee a 7-8 year old game that she still laughs about. Then up the rec ladder until I decided to join the local board and try my hand at high school ball. Needless to say, some interesting conversations regarding rules and coaches vs officials have occured as I have progressed in rule interpertation and game management over the past few years. However, we both agree the exchanges have helped us both. She may be a coach, but how many of you have significant others that would rather watch a ball game than "Who wants to be a millionaire"? Merry Christmas to all! |
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From the sitch you describe I too would say NO the player does not still have his dribble. Mike |
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