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A handful of jersey
I know what some members will say, but I wanted to share this anyway. Tonight I had a NAIA game and after a steal the defender had a handful of jersey momentarily. The offensive player continued down the court and my partner called a foul preventing the player from attempting an uncontested layup. The team was in the double bonus, but didn't get the ball back like they would have if an intentional was called. What would you do? What are the odds of accidentally grabbing a jersey? If not on accident, that means the jersey was grabbed on purpose or...
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"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are." -- John Wooden |
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I don't have a problem with letting it go under the advantage/disadvantage principle. Either way you face a dilemma. If you let it go and the kid is a 90% free throw shooter, you may hear it from the coach that you did not call the intentional and give him the ball back. If you call it and the player misses the free throws and they don't score on the next possession, you may hear it for not allowing his player the uncontested lay-up. I think he made a good call. By the way, was there a coach's reaction to the no call?
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The coach asked why the official didn't let the player go uncontested to the hoop. The grab occured at mid court and the player was free by the time the official blew the whistle.
In this case, I can see letting the play continue because the player would get the opportunity to shoot a layup. However, if the foul is called how can it not be intentional? Johnnyrao, do you make all your calls based on what you might hear from a coach? RichMSN, how do you determine a fist full of jersey to be anything other than intentional? If you can legitimately explain that one I will have a whole new outlook on this action.
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"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are." -- John Wooden |
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![]() I can see what the OP said. The player ends up with a fistful of jersey, but that's the end result, not the behavior that generated the whistle. I had someone holding a cutter on a throw-in and balance was lost (which was what drew my whistle) and what everyone saw as my whistle brought attention to the area was one player grabbing another player's jersey. Tableside, I had a quick chat with the coach who was OK with the explanation (not like that's terribly important). |
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Rich, I don't even understand what you are saying and I think - hold on let me check.
Yep, I'm the OP and this is about grabbing a jersey. Can you explain to me how you can explain a common foul when a player gets their jersey grabbed? How does that happen on accident?
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"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are." -- John Wooden |
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