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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 04:26am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
If there's only one thing that's certain on this play, it is that nobody ran up anybody's back.
Or that nobody stuck out their leg.

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  #2 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 06:18am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
Or that nobody stuck out their leg.
#2 definitely stuck out his leg, I just don't think that there was any contact, at least from our camera angle, which was pretty close to the same angle that the trail had on this play.
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 07:38am
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I see four basic positions so far, all based on the same video clip.

1. MSU #2 did not stick out his foot, no contact, no foul
2. MSU #2 did stick out his foot, no contact, no foul
3. MSU #2 did stick out his foot, contact with KU player, no foul
4. MSU #2 did stick out his foot, contact with KU player, foul

If I were supervisor, the only two of these that I would not accept would be options 1 and 3. For option 1, I think I see the foot clearly out past the shoulder width of MSU #2.

For option 3: the idea that the contact was incidental goes against my training: incidental contact by definition does not significantly affect play. The KU player went to the floor, but he kept his dribble, so I guess somebody might want to make this case, but we've all seen touch fouls called that affected the play less than this contact.

The contact might have been accidental, sure, but we call accidental contact fouls all the time. The KU player did not intentionally run into his leg (and miss or nearly miss?), and to the worry that this ruling would overburden the defense I would reply: if you don't want to risk being called for an accidental trip, keep your feet under your body. IMO, option 3 would be the hardest to sell to a supervisor.

That leaves options 2 and 4, the choice between which hinges on whether there was contact. I can't tell from the video. If I were the supervisor, I'd want to hear what L had to say about the call.
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  #4 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 10:43am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mbyron View Post

incidental contact by definition does not significantly affect play.
Say what??

Where is that written as a part of the definition of incidental contact??

Example - defender pressuring the ball handler coming up the court. A5 sets a screen at midcourt. Defender never sees the screen and runs into A5 hard. A5 is bigger and just stands there, but little defender ends up sprawled on floor as ball handler proceeds to attack the basket with his/her dribble. You're going to call a foul because - even though it was incidental contact - it affected the play as they are now playing 5 on 4??

IMO, this thinking was probably exactly what the L on the OP had going through his mind as he blew the whistle. And he was wrong - again, JMO.
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  #5 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 11:12am
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If you're asking where the rules define 'incidental contact', you know of course that the rules don't define it. I assume that you're not asking for a dictionary definition. Do you use an alternative definition that's significantly different?

You also know that judging whether contact "significantly affects the play" is exactly what we're paid to do. It's a test we apply to borderline cases of contact to determine whether the contact constitutes a foul.

As for your case, if the screen were legal, then the question of whether the contact is incidental does not arise. By judging that the screen is legal, you've already answered the question of the legality of the contact.

I guess I don't see the problem.
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  #6 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 11:14am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mbyron View Post
If you're asking where the rules define 'incidental contact', you know of course that the rules don't define it.
Of course!!

NCAA 4-40.
NFHS 4-27.

Oops.
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  #7 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 11:18am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrapper1 View Post
Of course!!

NCAA 4-40.
NFHS 4-27.

Oops.
Well, of course I meant other than rule 4.
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  #8 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 12:57pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac View Post
#2 definitely stuck out his leg, I just don't think that there was any contact, at least from our camera angle, which was pretty close to the same angle that the trail had on this play.
Moving toward the ball is not sticking your leg out. And the Kansas player did come from behind the MSU player. If there was contact, I am not sure how in the heck the MSU player is responsible. If that is a foul, we do not call a lot of fouls like this. I do not even think he saw the player going after the ball. The Kansas player was trying to get by him.

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  #9 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 03:27pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
Moving toward the ball is not sticking your leg out. And the Kansas player did come from behind the MSU player. If there was contact, I am not sure how in the heck the MSU player is responsible. If that is a foul, we do not call a lot of fouls like this. I do not even think he saw the player going after the ball. The Kansas player was trying to get by him.

Peace
What do we have:
  1. B1 not facing the opponent (no LGP)
  2. B1 moving into the path of A1 (without LGP)...
  3. B1 creating contact with A1 such that it causes A1 to fall.
Not seeing the opponent should have any bearing on the situation.

Also note that A1 got everything but his trailing foot past B1 without any contact. A1 met any reasonable requirement (head/shoulders) for getting through the space.

Most the times when we see this, it doesn't lead to the ball handler falling down....or the ball handler put themselves in a bind all on their own and we don't call it since it didn't create an advantage that wasn't already there. The Kansas player got tripped by a defender moving a foot into his path....and no, I'm not in any way, shape, or form, a Kansas fan.
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  #10 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 03:42pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
What do we have:
  1. B1 not facing the opponent (no LGP)
  2. B1 moving into the path of A1 (without LGP)...
  3. B1 creating contact with A1 such that it causes A1 to fall.
Not seeing the opponent should have any bearing on the situation.

Also note that A1 got everything but his trailing foot past B1 without any contact. A1 met any reasonable requirement (head/shoulders) for getting through the space.

Most the times when we see this, it doesn't lead to the ball handler falling down....or the ball handler put themselves in a bind all on their own and we don't call it since it didn't create an advantage that wasn't already there. The Kansas player got tripped by a defender moving a foot into his path....and no, I'm not in any way, shape, or form, a Kansas fan.
LGP applies to a player defending the ball, not players moving all over the floor without the ball. The basics of basketball contact rules say each player has their right to a position on the floor. LGP is not apart of this discussion. And this was a loose ball and a Kansas player came from behind his opponent to try to move to a position. If there was contact (which there was not), the Michigan St. player was not responsible for that kind of contact. This was not a screen being set. And a player falling or not may or may not have anything to do with a foul being called. Players fall all the time and no one advocates a foul every time it takes place. If a screen was not set for the Kansas player in such a tight space, there would not have been the chance for contact.

You are right, the Kansas player did get tripped....by his own feet.

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  #11 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 03:51pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
The basics of basketball contact rules say each player has their right to a position on the floor.
But he didn't have the position on the floor where the contact took place. If the Michigan player had been still and the guy tripped, it would be totally different. The Michigan guy undeniably extended his foot as the Kansas player's trailing foot came by, and apparently made just enough contact to cause the trip.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 04:05pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
But he didn't have the position on the floor where the contact took place. If the Michigan player had been still and the guy tripped, it would be totally different. The Michigan guy undeniably extended his foot as the Kansas player's trailing foot came by, and apparently made just enough contact to cause the trip.
Michigan State player stepped away.
Kansas guy caused contact from behind.
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  #13 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 04:18pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
But he didn't have the position on the floor where the contact took place. If the Michigan player had been still and the guy tripped, it would be totally different. The Michigan guy undeniably extended his foot as the Kansas player's trailing foot came by, and apparently made just enough contact to cause the trip.
Once again, the Kansas player was coming from behind another moving player.

The MSU player did not try to stop the movement of the Kansas player. They both were going in the same direction and if anyone was responsible for falling, it was the Kansas player. I guess I have been missing a lot of fouls on players that run into them. Then again, I am still waiting for the angle that shows there was contact. I still have not seen any. And even if there was contact, you cannot have a foul that the Lead should call that people cannot even agree with. Long way to get a "debatable" call for the Lead official. And this is the major point of all of this, not whether there was contact or no.

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  #14 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 03:46pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
What do we have:
  1. B1 not facing the opponent (no LGP)
  2. B1 moving into the path of A1 (without LGP)...
  3. B1 creating contact with A1 such that it causes A1 to fall.
Not seeing the opponent should have any bearing on the situation.

Also note that A1 got everything but his trailing foot past B1 without any contact. A1 met any reasonable requirement (head/shoulders) for getting through the space.
Yeah, #15 met those requirements just before he kicked #2 in the calf; and then #15 kicked himself....
Don't bail out that #15 guy.
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  #15 (permalink)  
Old Mon Mar 30, 2009, 05:15pm
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Triping, Or Being Tripped, But It's Academic, Because There Was No Observable Contact

Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
Moving toward the ball is not sticking your leg out. And the Kansas player did come from behind the MSU player. If there was contact, I am not sure how in the heck the MSU player is responsible. If that is a foul, we do not call a lot of fouls like this. I do not even think he saw the player going after the ball. The Kansas player was trying to get by him.
#2, for whatever reason, took a step slightly backward, and slightly to his right, and if this were a block charge situation, and if there was contact, which I have yet to observe on any replay, this would be a blocking foul, which it isn't, because I still can't see any contact. If there was contact here, and that's a big if from any angle that I've seen, this would be a case of a player being tripped, not a player tripping over a leg that was already there.
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