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In 15, it is irrelevant if the ball went through the basket or not. If the foul was committed by A1 before he returned to the floor, there can be no score. Re: number 8. Your terminology is incorrect. Teams cannot call timeout. They may only request it. Only officials can call timeout. Now, before you roll your eyes and think this is petty, please know that I make this correction in grammar all the time because we don't want players to think that as soon as a coach or a player yells timeout that one exists. All too often I have seen a coach yell timeout and players stop playing when a timeout cannot be granted. Here's an incredible story. I had a spring league HS varsity game a few weeks ago where a defensive coach yelled timeout during play and two of his players started walking toward their bench. The ballhandler had an uncontested lane to the hoop and took it. This was in the last three minutes of a tied game. After the basket, I asked the coach if he still wanted the timeout. He said yes and I asked him if he was sure. He yelled at me that he said "yes" the first time and "what was my problem?" I said OK, gave him the timeout and then gave the team a T for excessive timeouts. When he complained, I reminded him he had been notified after he used his final legal one, and he said that was "bull****." WHACK number two (unfortunately, the first was an indirect so he got to stay). This was at a venue that has a house rule that all technicals are two shots, possession, plus an automatic two points for the other team!!! His team wound up losing by eleven. Sometimes Judge Judy isn't the only one who dispenses justice. ![]() [Edited by Mark Padgett on May 14th, 2002 at 04:09 PM]
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Yom HaShoah |
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Re: Re: the answers
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where this was already posted with the answer he did do a good job with his explanations. #15 is interesting because he seems to be a little confused by the NCAA mens rule on PC. It actually states that a PC occurs only when the player has control of the ball, so his explanation should have been F, the basket counts and A1 is charged with a *common* foul. But the test did say assume NF rules. NCAA women's & NF are the same with respect to PC, it applies when the player has control or is an airborne shooter, so the basket does not count in #15.
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Mark
here's my two cents... I am not sure I'd want to work with this partner. there are a couple of these that you could let go calling them "judgement" but when there was a clear mistake in the rule interpretation, I hope you corrected it. the ball hitting the feet, the backcourt that hit A, then A picked it up could be "judgement" and I would definitely confront. I would kas her the same way you did... What did you see, but if she argued with me and I knew what the rule was, I'd tell her she was wrong. As far as the funky T's I hope you "overruled" and fixed them. |
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Bottom line, would you want to work with: #1 - Mark's partner or #2 - a slightly less polished official who had a better understanding of the rules? It's an easy question. Just pick a number. #1 or #2. There's no need for a 6 paragraph DeNucci-like response! ![]() |
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And yes - I corrected the "funky" Ts. Boy, that went over big with her. ![]()
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Yom HaShoah |
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I think the question is not fair. I do not think I would take this Mark's partner under any circumstance. I do not consider anything she did as good court presence. She cracked under pressure no matter what she might have acted like. I do not want a partner that is totally lacking of knowledge, I just want someone that is confident in what they call and can handle themselves under pressure. Maybe that does not answer your question, but it is my answer and I am sticking to it. ![]() Well that was 2 paragraphs. Well maybe three now. ![]() Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Good discussions guys.
![]() Pennsylvania Coach: Nice job on the answers. You seem to be in the same "mold" as Hawks Coach. Both of you seem very much interested in the game and these discussions.
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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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![]() Pennsylvania Coach: Nice job on the answers. You seem to be in the same "mold" as Hawks Coach. Both of you seem very much interested in the game and these discussions. Both coaches: When you're ready to give up the coaching gig, come on over to our side! You'll be glad you did. |
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Re: An explanation for Cornellref
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Re: Re: An explanation for Cornellref
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[Edited by Jurassic Referee on May 15th, 2002 at 12:09 PM] |
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B can get the TO if called before at A's disposal. On an administered throw-in, the concept is quite clear. When A gets ball from ref, ball is at disposal, count starts, B can't get a TO, etc.
I think that most refs look at the time where A is just getting the ball but cannot throw it in yet as a gray area, where they are inclined to grant a coach a timeout. Similarly, refs usually start the count when the player steps out with the ball and face the court, rather than when they first touch it. It is a matter of 1-2 seconds, but in my experience this is how refs handle throw-ins after a made basket. And if you haven't started your count (or normally would not have started your count), then you are treating B the same as you are treating A by granting the TO. Just my opinion, but backed up by many observations ![]() I would also add that counts are not generally started until a player is ready to throw in unless the player seems to take excessive time. This observation is confined to the normal made basket, retrieve ball, step out, turn, and throw. [Edited by Hawks Coach on May 15th, 2002 at 12:39 PM] |
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Re: Re: An explanation for Cornellref
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I don't agree with you that a TO should be able to be requested until the player is OOB and facing the court. If this is what NF wanted, that is what they would have written in the rule book. After a made basket we try to get the ball inbounded within 1 second from the time it goes through the net. Sometimes the player is never really facing the court (more like facing the sidelines) when the passing motion begins. The opponent is given quite an advantage if they are able to stop our fastbreak as our player is jumping OOB and preparing to inbound it Just a Coach |
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Gary
We do the same - grab the ball and fly. I teach my post players to grab it right out of the net, step out and fling it to our point guard and we are off to the races. I think refs tend also to adjust to this, but your experiences may differ. Again, I am referring to the run of the mill made basket, ball bounces once, A makes lazy grab and begins to move toward OOB while B is calling TO. A isn't in any hurry to inbound so B isn't getting a huge advantage. In the other case you cite, a total miscall and I haven't seen it done that way and not have it later called an inadvertent whistle. |
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