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A 30-on me???
An unusual situation occurred in a Girls Varsity game on Saturday (one of my varsity partners was doing the game, but I was not). Coaches complaining about some calls -- but nothing that rose to the level of a technical foul. Players complaining -- but nothing that rose to the level of a technical foul. These assumptions made based on the fact that the officials had not called any technical fouls during the game up to that point.
Midway through third quarter, the referee blew his whistle and announced to the table, "We are taking a 30-second time out on ME." He then proceeded to summon both coaches to get the players together. Once the players were assembled, he announced, "We need the players to stop complaining about our calls and play basketball." Comments? |
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Nice try on preventative officiating.
However, if in your pregame you have asked the coaches and players "Can we expect that you and your players will exhibit proper sporting behavior throughout the game?" then you have every right to use the technical foul. When the coach wants to know why calmly explain they failed to exhibit proper sporting behavior.
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I've done that before - years & years ago. I forget the cimcumstances though. It was a youth league game, IIRC. It both teams are chirping a lot, and you want to penalize it, it does seem a little unfair to T one team up and not the other, when the first T can serve as a warning for the non-T'd team. However, at this point, it is usually because an official didn't take care of earlier business - whether blowing his whistle or not. If it's at all possible, perhaps a simultaneous unsporting T can be used?
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Pope Francis |
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1. Where should the other two officials stand on a "30-on-me" time out? 2. How many "30-on-me"s does each official get each game? 3. What is the penalty if an official calls on "30-on-me", but does not have any left? |
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Right would always be: point of interruption. This would be the AP arrow when neither team had control.
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Cheers, mb |
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Exactly
Although I don't calim to correct all the time (just most of the time), if the palyers are complaining it is usually when neither team has control, therefore, I suggested the AP for double technical.
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I would suggest most times you would have a double T would be either trash-talking during a dead ball or while one team heads the other way after a play at the other end.
Neither of these situations would result in an AP throw-in. In fact, about the only time you'll have it is if you whack two guys after a shot is up and before it's rebounded - a time it would be very rare for two guys to be getting after each other in this way. |
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I did this once in a boys varsity game between two schools for the deaf. I didn't call a time-out, but used a dead ball opportunity to call both coaches together, and ask them to huddle with their teams for a few seconds and tell them enough of the trash-talking (signing). I did this only because I could understand it, but my partner didn't and I saw a few words exchanged. After that, it went much more smoothly.
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