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Au contraire, mon ami. The infraction, as I understand it, is not for WEARING a shirt of different number, but for requiring the scorer to change the number in the book after 10 minutes before game time. Since the shirt change was, in fact, reported to the scorer, I wouldn't call it an attempt to deceive the opposing team, but a failure on the part of the scorer to inform the refs. The question then becomes whether it was a legitimate reason to change the shirt in the first place, and whether it thus warrants a technical. Yes, the officials definitely should have been notified, but was that the team's fault or the scorer's? Either way, if you decide it does warrant a "T," the penalty (page 57, Rules Book) is given when the situation occurs. Also, the Casebook seems pretty clear (10.1.2) that once the ball becomes live after this situation, "it is too late to penalize."
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Both of these situations arose in a high school game.
I've gotten different opinions from the half dozen or so other officials that I've asked about the first situation. I had a game in which a player attempted to make a low lob pass; he released the ball from behind the 3 point arc, and the ball was batted by a player inside the 3 point arc (at least, I'm pretty sure the player was inside). Upon the batting of the ball, it rose perfectly and banked in. Is this a 3 point basket? It was awarded as such, since it left from behind the arc, and not a person questioned the call, yet I think it may have been wrong. I've been told that the touching of the ball has nothing to do with the awarded point value, regardless of where the defensive player is located. Yet other refs state that I have to decide whether the ball was released on a shot or a pass. This doesn't necessarily make much sense, as a lob pass (untouched) from the behind the arc would count as a 3 pointer if it were to go in. Secondly, in a game that I was not involved in but has been quite the topic of conversation among officials here, a girl had blood on her jersey and changed jerseys at halftime. She was NOT directed to do so by the officials. Her number was thus changed, and she reported it to the scorekeeper after the halftime break. She did NOT, however, report the change to any official, and neither did the scorer. In the fourth quarter, the situation was brought to the officials' attention when this player committed a foul. What is the penalty? A technical foul certainly seems correct, since the change was not reported to the officials, but is it flagrant, with an ejection, or is it an indirect to the head coach? Any help and explanation you could offer would be most helpful. |
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First play. If batted by defense, 3 points. If batted by offense, 2.
Change shirt because of blood. By the book you should have a technical for not reporting the change to an official. By common sense. No T. You have to change the joursey anyway. It was reported to the scorekeeper. My ego isn't so big that I need it reported to me. |
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Here's my opinion -
#1 - First of all, even if this was a 3 point try, it is where the player's FEET are when the ball is released, not where the ball is released. This means a player can have his feet behind the arc, "fly several feet in the air" and release the ball and it is a 3. Saw it in a freshman game that put it into OT. If this was not a shot -- it was viewed as lob pass by officials -- how can we count it a three? Should count for 2 since ball was tipped into basket within the arc. #2 - this is a team technical. Player can still enter game after technical is assessed and administered. |
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I don't believe the second situation is an "ego" situation; it is a rule, and although common sense is a nice thing to use in many situations, it is not of much use here. There is a rule applicable here, and as such, my question remains of how to apply it. I think that although keeping one's ego out of it is admirable, you penalize the other team if you don't enforce the rules correctly.
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In situation #1, if there was ANY possibility of the ball going in on its own, legitimate shot or simply a pass attempt, I believe we have to consider it a shot and count it a 3 even if tipped by the defense. Sounds like the "D" was pretty close by (just inside the arc?), so it might have been tough to tell if the ball clearly could not have gone in. But, if the lob pass was clearly on a low trajectory and then got deflected upward, subsequently going in, you could justify that it was not a legitimate shot and therefore only scores 2 points (see Casebook, 4.39.4A&B). If in doubt,though, I'd call it a shot and give him the 3 pts.
In situation #2, changing the shirt because of blood appears to be legitimate, whether or not the officials told the player to change it. However, the team does have to inform the refs. But...in order to assess a "T," the violation of rule has to be discovered at the time it occurs and penalized before the ball becomes live (see Casebook, 10.1.2). Once play resumes, it is too late to issue a technical for the changed shirt and number. Either way, if you caught it in time, it would be a normal team technical, not a flagrant or ejection. |
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Situation 1: The fact that the ball was tipped does not change anything. IF it was a try before, it's still a try. If it was not, it's still not. And, it matters not where the player who tipped the ball was located [inside or outside the arc -- I suppose if the player were out-of-bounds it might have some earing, but I don't think that's possible. Now watch, I'll have it happen in my next game ].
So, you need to decide whether the initial release was a pass or a try, then rule 2 or three points accordingly. The reason three points is usually awarded on a "lob pass" that enters the basket is because it's difficult to tell whether it was a (ugly looking) try or a (poor) pass, and the generally accepted philosophy has been to award the try (three points). I'd do the same on this play: If the ball had a chance at the basket without the tip, award three; otherwise award 2. References: 4.39.4A, 4.39.4B, 5.2.1D Situation 2: Allow the player to play without penalty. If you thought the change (and lack of reporting) was designed to confuse the other team, you could rule this unsportsmanlike. I'd give the T directly to the coach in this instance. Reference: 3.3.5B |
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Jackgil,
No, I wasn't confused at all about whether to award a 3 by where the offensive player's feet are...My question is whether the position of the defensive player and whether it is a pass or shot has anything to do with the value of the basket. |
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In reply to Todd's post...it is not whether or not the violation is detected "at the time it occurs and penalized before the ball becomes live"; the rule book specifically states "discovered while being violated." This was the case; had the player not been in the game when the infraction was discovered, no penalty is administered. But the book does not talk about live/dead ball in this situation.
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quote: Todd is right. Once that player with the "illegal" number comes in, and ball goes live, too late for the T. ------------------ Brian Johnson |
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I respectfully disagree with Brian and Todd.
The Penalty part of the rule says "Penalized if discovered while being violated." Only in Art. 3 (illegal number) does the Penalty say penalized if discovered before the ball becoming live. This is an Article 1 infraction (participate after changing his/her number without reporting to scorers AND an official). The ball becoming live is not applicable here if you read Rule 10.3.1 and its penalty phase. |
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grussell -
youre not trying to embarrass 2 of our more experienced refs are yoU? *GRIN* If the average fan knew how many rules there are to remember at a seconds notice, they would ahve more respect for refs. I know I have more respect for refs since taking it up 3 years ago. |
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Okay...the scoop on both questions.
I live in NC, and as such, have access to Dick Knox, head of the National Federation Rules Committee for basketball. I just finished talking to him, and his answer to both situations is as follows: 1. Basket counts as a 2. As soon as it was touched, it is no longer a 3. 2. Team technical, neither direct nor indirect to the head coach. Two shots and the ball, but the technical is not flagrant. It IS penalized WHEN discovered being violated. The live ball argument does not apply here. This situation differs little from a player not being in the book and scoring a basket or committing a foul; penalized when discovered if the player is in the game. |
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