|
|||
Plays...
I know we all miss calls but I just want to bring into question these plays. everybody talks about NBA guys missing "obvious" plays, well what about some of these. And before any of this great debate starts I would like to say that I believe that nba officials should be held to a higher standard and IMO they are.
Here are the plays: I don't know about the second play, but the first play is blatantly obvious and 2 officials have a shot at this play: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKHf00juP18 Is this not an obvious travel? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7DjZ...eature=related What's illegal about this player's position? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mILwQctYLw I think everybody remembers this one! I am sorry, some might say a bump is a bump but I just don't think this is enough especially with the clock so close to going off and this kid not even having a shot at...well... the shot. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=No5hnQ0JjUA Let the discussion begin? |
|
|||
Bad calls are going to happen. Should NBA officials be held to a higher standard? That can be debatable. But you should also think that officials are human as well, they are going to make mistakes just like everyone else will. In my opinion an official will never cause a team to lose the game. If you think about it, unless a team makes every shot, doesnt turn the ball over, and does absolutely everything right to win that game, they are going to win and it will not come down to an officials so called "bad call." Everyone is human and everyone is going to make mistakes.
|
|
|||
The first two plays are obvious missed calls. No excuses possible....especially at the D1 level.
The third play....I've watched that play dozens of times and I still haven't seen an angle that would convince me of the correct call- one way or the other. In the first view it looks like the defender might have leaned sideways out of his vertical plane at the last second, causing the contact. I couldn't tell for sure because the camera panned upward to go with the shot, but it very briefly looked that way. A block may have actually been the right call....emphasis on "may". That's the kind of call where you'd like to be able to ask the calling official what he saw on the play. We beat the fourth call to death in a past extensive thread. Iirc, the consensus was that the call had to be made because the admitted minimal contact forced the dribbler OOB. You can't ignore the OOB call, so the official really didn't have much choice other than to call a foul. Also iirc, the Big East backed up the call later as being correct. Jmo. |
|
|||
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
|||
I Can Describe That Call In Ten Words ...
Quote:
This is a great way to explain the call. I thought the same thing back when it happened. Scrapper1 describes this call in only ten words, and it can't be explained better than that. |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
|
|||
Like everybody else, I'm having difficulty locating the foul here. But why is the L making this call? It's across the paint. The C had nothing on this play. Unless the C is screened from the contact, and from the reaction of the players it appears the foul was called on the defender closest to the C, which the L would have to look through 2 other bodies to see. IMHO, the L has no business making this call.
__________________
"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
|
|||
The travell is just stupid, should've been called no question about it.
The first video. Well the OOB play is not good but the lead is to close. I've seen it before and I've been there, if you don't back away in that situation you will miss it. Why nobody else stepped in and called that I do not know though, the trail should've been able to make that call without for example. The second call (elbow) is also due to an error by the lead. He follows the ball insted of watching the players closest to him. That's an error I think we all make though, it's not good but it will happen. The blocking foul: I think they could've just dropped that and went with a no call. I do realise why the official calls it though becuse from the second angle it's impossible to say if the contact is legal or if the defender uses his side to initate it. Like I said I think they should just've ignored it and played on. The last play has to be called, I agree with what has already been posted that even though it's just a small bump it forces the dribbler out of bounds and therefore creates a significant advantage for the fouling player. It's not a call you'd love to make but it has to be made, and that's what we're payed for so I don't think there's much more to say about it.
__________________
All posts I do refers to FIBA rules |
|
||||
The NFL does not allow replay for judgment calls and penalties. IOW, replays wouldn't have helped. College basketball does, in fact, allow replay review to resolve timing issues and three vs. two points.
Allowing replay reviews for fouls, travels, and other penalties would not make the game better.
__________________
Sprinkles are for winners. |
|
|||
Quote:
ok I've went back and watched several different youtube videos of the georgetown/villanova game. It does look like the kid steps out of bounds, but here is my thoughts and breakdown of the play: The kid gets bumped at .9 then it looks like his foot is out of bounds at .4. You're telling me that this D1 referee doesn't have a patient enough whistle to wait, at most, .9 seconds to whistle an OOB or a foul and declare an overtime. I'm a true believer in the rules, but I'm also a true believer of doing what is right for the game and I put that first above my crew, then my crew comes in second, and I come in last. I don't believe that this was right for this game. These two teams had obviously battled it out (the score was 53 to 53), especially on both teams defensive end. To call a foul such as that one does not entail doing what is right for the game. Now whether the contact by the kid was legitimate illegal contact... that is up for debate. IMO he stops short of contact, but it's just a play full of what ifs? What if he doesn't step on the line, does Bob Donato have anything? What if Brent Barry had just jumped into Fisher when he was in mid air floating toward him? This my friends is why we all have the hardest sport to officiate in the world, I do believe. |
|
|||
Quote:
Here's an example. With just a few seconds left, it's a one point game. B1 bumps A1, who is dribbling the ball, in the backcourt. You've called this amount of contact a foul the entire game but now, because of the "game situation" you choose not to call it because the contact was not especially "hard". We've all seen an official do something similar numerous times. Let me ask you - if this happens, who is deciding the outcome of the game - the players or the officials? The answer should be obvious, but I know there's tons of you out there who would pass on the call, and there's tons of you out there who think that's the right thing to do.
__________________
Yom HaShoah |
Bookmarks |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Two different plays | harmbu | Baseball | 11 | Wed May 02, 2007 12:54pm |
2 Plays | UmpJM | Football | 49 | Mon Oct 16, 2006 01:20pm |
3 Plays | UmpJM | Football | 23 | Tue Oct 03, 2006 08:24am |
Does any one know who he plays for ? | kade | Rugby | 0 | Wed Jul 12, 2006 07:36pm |