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Here's why it could be a big deal, and why it's bugging me:
NCAA Womens game 30.8 left in 2nd half. Team B just scored to tie the game. Team A inbounds the ball and advance to midcourt and calls timeout. Clock stops at 24.9. Shot clock shows 25 (24.1 in actual time?). Table confirms there were no timing errors. By NCAA rule, you must turn the clock off. (2-11-10) Turn off the shot clock when a reset situation occurs and the game clock shows less time than that of a shot-clock period. Team B coach will have a problem. He/she was thinking if we have a shot clock violation, we will still have 0.8 to get a pass and shot off. I would agree.
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Trust your partners, but trust yourself more. Training, experience and intuition are your currency. Last edited by pizanno; Fri Jan 16, 2009 at 05:58pm. |
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