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Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee
1) Cool. Of course, I don't agree, but cool. My original question still stands. Explain why no time is put back on the clock in AR121.
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Because without a monitor it would nearly impossible to have the knowledge needed to make such an adjustment to the clock.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee
2) Unfortunately for your thesis, AR121 says that they don't use the monitor. I'm still interested though in how you could accurately find out from the monitor whether to put 0.1 or 0.2 seconds back on the clock. You stated that they go by "contact". Well, how do they go by contact? How do they determine accurately to within a tenth of a second when contact on this particular play becomes a foul? Or do they guess?
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They view the video and use their best judgment to determine when the contact that constitutes a foul takes place. Once the officials determine the point on the video replay when that happens they freeze the display and look at the little clock on the screen. Whatever that clock says is the amount put back on. Sound simple enough?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee
PS- I didn't make the damned approved ruling up. It's in the NCAA rulebook. That AR is almost word-for-word the same situation as the second sequence that Dan posted above. And that situation is the same as the question asked in the original post in this thread. Both the NCAA AR and the FED case play tell you how to handle that particular play. In the AR you've got a RULE that says that you do NOT put 0.1 seconds back on the clock. All of the theses in the world can't change that little slice of history.
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How about a rule interpretation from September 19, 2005?