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To each his/her own. I prefer to operate in the real world, where officials make mistakes and where coaches are *GASP* sometimes right.
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![]() I guess the easier route would be to say, "stay out of my area." Trust your partner? Absolutely, but keep the team officiating concept in mind. |
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It's great when you come into my primary and get one right that I was screened out on. But when you come into my primary and get it wrong, especially when it's right in front of me, then both of us look bad. That's not good for the team officiating concept. Respect your partner's primary and trust him.
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"Honest difference are often a healthy sign of progress" Ghandi |
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Yom HaShoah |
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And, you being screened out has nothing to do with it. I don't have time to decide WHY you missed the play. Only that you missed it. |
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Then you aren't doing enough thinking on the court. Attempting to understand what your partner can see and is doing is a major part of officiating. In fact, that's the partnership aspect of it. What you advocate is just calling your own game. It seems to me that you act more like an individual than part of a team.
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The bottom line is that, when the play is over, we'll talk about it. I have my perspective, you have yours. What I "think" is going on may actually not be the case. But when I see something, and I KNOW I see it, I'm going to wait for you to blow your whistle, then I'm following NFHS instruction and blowing my whistle. I can think of no other reason, other than ego, why an official would have a problem with me reasonably coming into their area to catch something they missed (for whatever reason). I've had plenty of occasions where a partner picked up something that was in my primary that I missed. That's teamwork, and I've expressed such to partners I've had rather than launching into some meaningless diatribe about "coming into my area" as if I own that section of the court. |
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First, going with your partner's decision, which you refer to as "live and die with it", is the complete opposite of being "me centric." It's deferring to someone else.
Second, studies have shown that calls made out of one's primary are only correct 25% of the time. That means that you are screwing up the game 75% of the time. |
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Very well said. Obvious things need to be called. It's the officials with the ego problems who get upset when those obvious things end up being called by someone else. Most often, they are mad because they have just been "made to look bad" - when, in truth, the crew did their (collective) job.
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I'd be interested in reading this study you refer to. Never heard of it. I seem to recall skepticism on this board about recent officiating "studies." ETA: I didn't coin the "live and die" phrase. It's from the first page of this thread, which started the discussion. Last edited by fiasco; Thu Jul 16, 2009 at 06:14pm. |
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I've Only Got An IAABO Manual ???
I can see value to both sides of this issue, so I'm not agreeing, or disagreeing with you, at this point, but I would like to see a NFHS citation to your two statements above. Thanks.
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"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” (Matthew 25:36) |
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There have been quite a few done by the NBA and the NCAA. |
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It's like you're trying to argue that you're not going to call a travel when a player, after ending his dribble, picks up his pivot foot then returns it to the floor before releasing the ball because you want to give him the benefit of the doubt, rulebook be damned. Blows my mind. Last edited by fiasco; Thu Jul 16, 2009 at 06:40pm. |
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