Nevadaref |
Thu Dec 13, 2007 07:56am |
Quote:
Originally Posted by CoachP
Watching boys varsity, 2 man crew. I'm in the second row right behind trail.
A2 takes a nifty backdoor pass from A1 (trail side of the lane) to the hoop and the the shot gets blocked to the FT line by B1. At the same time lead raises fist and blows whistle for a foul on B1, trail is already giving the "tip sign". He gave it several times...maybe hoping his partner would see him?
Who's area is that in 2 man? When/if/ever should the "tip sign" go up?
Should trail have confired with lead since he was so adamant with his "tip sign"? Or just let it go like he did...maybe they talked later....
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In 2-man the Lead has the entire FT lane as part of his PCA. If the play started outside of that on the Trail's side (in his PCA) and went to the block, then the Trail should be taking that play all the way to the basket. (See NFHS officials manual 2.3.2 C1) It seems that the Lead probably made a call on a play in which he had no business getting involved.
What you point out with the "tip sign" is very astute. For this very reason it should NOT be given 99% of the time.
In talking about this exact topic with a partner of mine two days ago, we came up with two instances in which it would be helpful.
1. An official needs help on an OOB call and his partner observed the deflection.
2. The ball comes from the C's primary in the fc and gets touched last by the defense before entering the bc. The C could give this TO HIS PARTNER so that the T doesn't whistle for a bc violation. The T may not know who last touched the ball as it did not come from his PCA.
Other than that, we believe that this "signal" needs to stay in baseball. It can only get basketball officials into trouble such as you described.
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