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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 04:43am
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Even if the defender was moving backwards it would be a charge, wouldn't it?

As defender was at the right spot in time
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 04:49am
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Originally Posted by christianH View Post
Even if the defender was moving backwards it would be a charge, wouldn't it?

As defender was at the right spot in time
Coach, he was moving backwards and your player still managed to run over him!

Yes, PC is proper call.
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 08:16am
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Originally Posted by Nevadaref View Post
Coach, he was moving backwards and your player still managed to run over him!
I often use this line with coaches, and it works every single time.

If I think the coach isn't the sharpest tool in the shed, I change the quote to "Coach, defender was moving backwards, which gave your player more room to avoid contact, but he still managed to run over him!"
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 03:03pm
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What about the following scenario?

A1 driving. B1 wants to take charge but starts to fall backwards way too early. He falls to the floor (without having been contacted by A1) and as A1 lands A1 trips over B1 and goes down.

Anything on B1?
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 03:09pm
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Originally Posted by Spence View Post
What about the following scenario?

A1 driving. B1 wants to take charge but starts to fall backwards way too early. He falls to the floor (without having been contacted by A1) and as A1 lands A1 trips over B1 and goes down.

Anything on B1?
If not a T for faking being fouled, then how about a block on B1? What do you think?
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 03:10pm
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Originally Posted by Spence View Post
What about the following scenario?

A1 driving. B1 wants to take charge but starts to fall backwards way too early. He falls to the floor (without having been contacted by A1) and as A1 lands A1 trips over B1 and goes down.

Anything on B1?
T by rule. But a lot of referees make up all kinds of excuses to not assess it.
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 03:39pm
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Originally Posted by ref2coach View Post
T by rule. But a lot of referees make up all kinds of excuses to not assess it.
Careful here. The T is assessed when a player fakes being fouled, not because they fall backwards early. They are allowed, by rule, to turn away or back away from contact. Now if the player grunts like they just got hit by a runaway elephant and fly backwards into the third row, all without any contact, then yes, you can probably say they were faking being fouled. But if they close their eyes and start to lean back expecting the contact that never comes, and end up falling down, then I wouldn't call that faking being fouled, and therefore not T-worthy.

Can you see the difference?
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 06:19pm
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Originally Posted by M&M Guy View Post
Careful here. The T is assessed when a player fakes being fouled, not because they fall back-wards early. They are allowed, by rule, to turn away or back away from contact. Now if the player grunts like they just got hit by a runaway elephant and fly back-wards into the third row, all without any contact, then yes, you can probably say they were faking being fouled. But if they close their eyes and start to lean back expecting the contact that never comes, and end up falling down, then I wouldn't call that faking being fouled, and therefore not T-worthy.

Can you see the difference?
I have seen and know the difference.

Notice I said "a lot" not all.

I rarely see a player "close their eyes and start to fall backward expecting contact that never comes." What I most frequently witness is the player who, someone has attempted to teach to draw a foul, does not have any or minimal contact then falls to the floor and looks for an official expecting a foul to be called. While the culprit's coach is shouting "thats a charge".
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 05:57pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ref2coach View Post
T by rule. But a lot of referees make up all kinds of excuses to not assess it.
Like M&M, I disagree with your ruling. Where is it a T for falling down too early?

BTW, I'm one of the few around here who have actually called this T; but it wasn't for falling down too early.
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Old Thu Feb 26, 2009, 03:33pm
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Originally Posted by Spence View Post
What about the following scenario?

A1 driving. B1 wants to take charge but starts to fall backwards way too early. He falls to the floor (without having been contacted by A1) and as A1 lands A1 trips over B1 and goes down.

Anything on B1?
I asked something similar to this a month or so ago, and the consensus seemed to be a) probably a no-call (if A1 has returned to the floor, after a shot, as I presume Spence means here), b) still possibly a charge (if B1 was simply trying to absorb the shock of an imminent charge but was just faked out, as it were. No T unless he's trying to obviously sell a phony call to the officials). Ultimately a HTBT.

But it was far from unanimous, as I recall.
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