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Delay of game?
BV game, late in first quarter.
A1 catches the ball in transition by the sideline opposite the table about 30 feet from the basket, my partner, who is T opposite, calls a travel. I had been L opposite and I am coming back up the sideline now to administer the throw-in. The player who has been called for the travel is holding the ball and has a bit of a confused "I can't believe you called that" look on his face. I have my hands out to ask for the ball and say "Here you go 22." He looks at me and then decides to roll the ball to my partner, who is jogging down the floor to become new L. It was pretty clear to me that the player did this just to be difficult because he was irritated with the call. My partner picked the ball up, blew his whistle, and called a delay of game warning. Here is the thing.... from a game management standpoint, I LOVE the way this was handled. As I said, there is no doubt the kid did this on purpose to be difficult, and yet I don't feel a "T" would have been the appropriate way to handle it (he did, after all, give the ball immediately to an official- just not the one that was asking for it.) When the quarter ended, the coach sent the player out to shake my partners hand and apologized. There were absolutely no incidents the rest of the game- it went as smooth as could be. The thing that I am a little bit apprehensive about is reporting this as a "delay of game" warning because of the rule change last year that ANY delay of game results in a technical foul after a warning. So if a player had, let's say, crossed the boundary on a throw-in after that, we would have gone straight to a T, and then I am afraid the first warning would have come back to bit us, because it isn't really one of the 4 types of delays. Just wanted to get other's opinion's on how they might have handled the situation. |
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Just a warning? Wow...
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Pope Francis |
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I agree with the previous posts. No delay warning. No question (in my mind anyway) this is a T for unsportsmanlike behavior.
Once in a while during a dead ball you'll see a kid throw the ball to the wrong ref just because he/she genuinely did not see the other nearby official because (refs were switching/screened by other players/etc...). Here you said the player clearly saw you...the same player who just had a call go against them...and had that look of anger/disbelief in their eyes. Go with the T. But if you still insist on the delay warning, then it should've been you blowing the whistle and issuing the warning, not your partner. Similar to when a coach is yelling at you for a call (or no-call), and your partner T's up the coach from across the floor, when in your mind, the coach hadn't quite stepped over the line just yet... |
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Bob- thanks for your input. That was pretty much what I thought. I think if I had been my partner I would have given the ball back to him, told him to go hand the ball to the other official (me), and said "don't even think about pulling a stunt like that again." I would have made sure the coach knew that we warned him after that. Again, the way my partner handled it worked out extremely well, it was just the "official" warning that made me a little nervous. I think I would have liked it better if it had been more along the lines of an "unofficial" warning. |
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No doubt a "T". If the kid wants to show up the official then the "T" is his prize.
![]() Called this in Men's Rec before...haven't experienced this in school ball (yet).
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Da Official |
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The kid didn't drop the ball and leave it there for me to get. He didn't wing it away. As soon as I asked him for the ball, he immediately gave it up, he just gave it to the other official (who was the one who made the travel call to begin with, was one the same sideline I was, and about 20 feet away.) Do I think he did it on purpose because he had an attitude? Yes, I believe so. So what? We addressed it and had no further problems. You want to "T" every kid who has ever rolled their eyes or shaken their head in irritation after you have made a call against them? Anyway, my issue has never been about whether or not this was a T. I am quite comfortable with how it was handled. It was about the delay of game that was called that wasn't one of the official types of delay. |
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My point is that the rules don't allow for what your partner did, and doing it that way could lead to problems (thus your issue) later in the game. The rules have a very specific penalty in place for this action, and it's a T. It obviously worked in your game the way it was done; that doesn't mean it's the best method to use; or that it's wouldn't have been better to use the correct method.
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Sprinkles are for winners. Last edited by Adam; Fri Feb 08, 2008 at 02:27pm. |
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