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I am a coach of a youth 4th 5th grade girls basketball team. We had a game today and I argued with an official that he was handing the ball in to quickly. As soon as the girl stepped up that was throwing it in he would hand it to her and start the 5 second count. This resulted in several turnovers for us because we were not set up and scattered across the floor. I kept my cool for the first 4 or 5 times, but finally called him over on a timeout and voiced my opinion. He said he had been officiating youth basketball for 15 years and had never heard of any rules when handing the ball in. Well I played basketball since I was 5 to 34 and watched thousands of games in between and unless a team won't come out of a time-out in time the officials always allow the teams to set up before handing the ball to the passer. Is there any official rules in the book on this?
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There is no rule regarding this. Depending on the level of play, some officials may hesitate a second or two to allow a really confused team to organize themselves. However, officials are encouraged to get the ball back into play quickly. If there is a player there for the throw-in, she should expect the ball as soon as she gets there. If there is no thrower, you should expect to see the ball on the floor.
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First thing, welcome to the forum.
I honestly am a little confused what you are wanting. But once you give the ball to the thrower, the count starts. There is no waiting for everyone to set up provision in the rules. It sounds to me like the official did the right thing, if I understand what you gripe is. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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One suggestion is to have the inbounder go to the throw-in spot a bit more deliberately. There is not a requirement that the team in possession must sprint to the throw-in spot. Make sure her teammates DO get quickly to their spots, but have the person taking the throw-in get their a bit slower. Assuming that there are no subs coming in and no fouls to report (even in these cases, there is no specified time requirements, but these activities should give a team more than enough time to get in position for a throw-in), there is no specified time for the official to wait to put the ball at the disposition of the thrower. By the time I point to the specific spot and make eye contact with my partner(s), generally, the offense is in position for the play. If a team is slow to get lined up, they may not be in position prior to the inbounder receiving the ball from one of us. But, this is very rare. We try to get the ball in play quickly to keep the flow of the game, but, we also try to give the offense (and defense) a reasonable amount of time to get ready for spot throw-ins. Last edited by CMHCoachNRef; Sat Jan 10, 2009 at 05:26pm. |
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Could someone tell me why there is no rules on this. You could have a player that dove for a loose ball that had not gotten up quickly enough to set up to defend the inbound pass and this would be a huge advantage to the offense. Surely there is some courtesy rule on this or I'm just crazy. Like I said before when I was playing in high school the official would always hold the ball for a few seconds even if the passer was standing there. Is there anyone that would agree with me on this.
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Yom HaShoah |
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As I would suspect of most officials, I hold the ball until I'm sure an procedural events are complete such as subs and my partner(s) are set and ready to go. As far as this being in the rule book, it would be hard to regulate. Goodness knows we have enough rules now.
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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OP never mentions his problem with official is due to extended huddle. In a kids game, survey the floor quickly and calmly hand ball to inbounder. I've had experience with guys who can't wait for game to end for a variety of reasons, just a stupid kid's game, cutting it too close for next games etc. who jam it in some 12 year old girl's hands the split second she steps out of bounds. I'm not saying this happened but that's my take on what poster is trying to convey.
Last edited by fullor30; Sun Jan 11, 2009 at 11:45am. |
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Secondly, you are only surmising whether the officials were in a hurry or not. I have seen officials give the ball to the player because they do not wait to make sure their partners are ready. I did not read anything that said why this happen other than the OPer did not know the rule. I was just giving a reason why this might have happen. I have no idea the motives and would not speculate on something like that just reading a play on the board. It does not matter if it is a kid's game or the state championship for high school. The bottom line is getting your kids out of the huddle and you will not have to worry about someone not being ready. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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I would strongly suggest you refer to my earlier post (While I have been an official for years now, I have been a coach since the 70s). This should eliminate the problem for your team when making a throw-in. While there is no "courtesy rule" per se in basketball, I don't know any official who would intentionally put the ball at the disposition of an inbounder if a player were still lying on the floor having just saved or having attempted to save the ball or if they requested to tie an untied shoe. At times, some officials do rush to get the ball back into play. Generally, these officials fit into one of two categories: 1. New officials who are in too big of a hurry and fail to make sure that the game is ready to be restarted 2. Veteran officials trying to get-in-and-get-out as quickly as possible. At the same time, if there is no reason to delay (no subs, no fouls being reported, no injured players, etc.), then as officials we DO try to get the ball in play as quickly as REASONABLY possible (not to be confused with the "courtesy rule.") ![]() |
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[QUOTE=CMHCoachNRef;567157]
2. Veteran officials trying to get-in-and-get-out as quickly as possible. I'm calling Bull**** on this. I have been taught to keep the game moving. I'm not of the mind set of get-in- get-out concept. The sooner the ball is back into play; the sooner the coach can start back coaching. So, to say that Veteran officials are of this mind set really displays your officiating I.Q.
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truerookie |
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