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He was driving the lane and split two defenders and stepped on one foot and his ankle touched the court. Didn't look good, made some people at my house a little quesy everytime they replayed it.
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"Contact does not mean a foul, a foul means contact." -Me |
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tony |
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From what I recall the defenders were vertical and left enough room for Coverdale to step through. He was turning a corner (kinda like a screen) around one of the defenders and stepped wide with his outside foot and planted it right on top of the defenders foot. Completely Coverdale's fault. Just on of those things that happens every once in a while.
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"Contact does not mean a foul, a foul means contact." -Me |
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Never argue with an idiot. He will bring you down to his level and beat you with experience. |
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to me, if using the baseline camera angle it appears that the defender on the left side of the screen has his leg a good ways outside of his frame.
even when the play occurred from the upperdeck angle i assumed that a foul had been called and davis would certainly have to replace coverdale with a freethrow shooter. i was very surprised that a tripping foul was not called. but apparently i am on the low percentage end of the foul pole.
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tony |
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Tony,
On first glance of the replay, I thought the same thing. Tripping foul. But I tried to put myself in the refs position and I can't honestly say I would have called a trip. (And I normally have no problem calling a trip if a player goes to the ground.) |
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I don't think stepping on a foot of a opponent who is playing normal defense on his own defender is a trip. I didn't think the def. did anything illegal. His foot may have been a little wide, but not because he was defending Coverdale, or b/c he stuck his foot out at the last second. Picture yourself defending, you have one foot in front and the back foot back with your upper body leaning toward the off. player. Coverdale just stepped ON the foot. As the old saying goes, stuff happens.
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foulbuster |
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If a player tries to split a double team and goes to the floor as a result, I would normally have nothing on this play so as not to bail a player out of a perilous situation that he created himself. However, it one on one situations where the offensive player goes the floor, I am taking a tripping foul.
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foulbuster |
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Make more sense? ![]() Chuck |
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analization
i want to analyze this situation a tad bit more.
after reviewing the play again let us focus on the baseline camera angle. coverdale does go between 2 defenders, i totally agree. on the right side of the screen(tv screen) we have the primary defender and on the left side of the screen there is a help/secondary defender. coverdale drives to the basket and his left foot(foot closest to the goal/inside foot) steps on the secondary defenders right foot(again secondary defender is to the right of coverdale). this means that the defender must have had his leg extended wide of his normal defensive stance for coverdale to be able to step on his foot. i just think that a foul should be called on these kinds of plays especially when it involves help defenders that are not playing good D. does anyone else have anything to add to clarify the situation?
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tony |
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