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Help me work through a block/charge scenario.
This happened last night in 7th-8th grade boys rec game. One of the teams in question have an issue with the referee who made the call based on this incident and past ones. Their "formal complaint" is being dismissed by me, but I am trying to educate the coaches involved as to why the call was made. The referee in question is very solid, calls a lot of varsity games, but sometimes leaves himself open to these situations as he is a little too willing to try and give an explanation during the game.
Here is what I saw: A1 catches a pass just inside the top of the key, pivots, drives hard to the basket. He does a jump stop, and makes an explosive move to the basket with his shoulder lowered. Think of a move where he is exploding out, and then up, in one motion from the jump stop. B1 slides in late under A1, hard contact occurs, and both players go down hard. B1 was absolutely punished by A1's shoulder. Based on what I have described, and assuming B1 did arrive late, what do you have and why? |
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B1 slides in late under A1, hard contact occurs.
This is all I need to determine a block in this case, sounds like B1 took A1's landing or he didn't establish LGP which would result in a block as well. A1 is an airborn shooter if I'm picturing the play correctly in my mind. Yeah its going to be an ugly crash, but an easy call from an official's perspective based on what I mentioned. Of course a video like Clark posts would be the best so one could see the whole play, but that is probably not an option. Last edited by Loudwhistle; Tue Feb 09, 2010 at 11:15am. |
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My thought as a coach was that B1 will learn not slide in late next time. |
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You would think that, right?
That is the call that was made. Here is where I need help. The coach of B1 is going ape poop over the lowering of the shoulder by A1 on his move to the basket. I will say his move was hard, and aggressive, but to me it looked like he dips to absorb a blow moreso than looking to dish one out. I need help explaining to the coach why the shoulder is the non-issue if B1 did not establish first. Here are some comments from the "complaint" sent to me: "I understand the nuances of the blocking foul on # 3. As I pointed out in my email, our player (#3) should have been charged with a blocking foul, as he clearly was not set prior to the contact. I was not lobbying for a "charge" either, because you can't have a charge and a blocking call symultaneously. My issue is the lowering of the shoulder and aggressive drive into the lane by the other team's player." This is a little different than his first argument where he wanted the charge, now he is arguing that A1 should receive a foul after his player is called for the block, based on the aggressive nature of the move. |
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But, when you say B1 arrived "late", do you mean he got to the spot AFTER A1 went airborne for his shot?
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Coach, you got anything on this?
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Yeah b/c if he went airborne, then B1 arrived at the spot, and then A1 gave him an airborne/intentional shoulder, I'd love to see that play. We're talking Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat now!
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My take was that A1 started his move to the basket and had left his feet before B1 slid in. I said earlier B1 slid under, because B1 came into the play leaning back trying to pick up the charge late.
I do appreciate all of the feedback I am getting from this, and it will help me explain this better to the coach. |
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It sounds to me that the coach is associating degree of contact with culpabilty, which of course is wrong. A1 airborne on a drive, B1 slides underneath and is flattened along with a blocking call, would be an analogy to tell your coach.
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If the shooter had been aggressive toward the defender, then we could talk about that. If the coach wants the charge called, tell him to get his player into LGP before the shot.
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Cheers, mb |
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Take a similar play where B1 gets to the spot late, but A1 punches B1 as part of the move. It's unlikely that happened based just on the "lowering of the shoulder", but it's possible. |
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Talking in hypotheticals, what kind of action with the shoulder would you need to see to come up with an intentional/flagrant on A1? What if he saw the defender stepping and lowered his shoulder just before contact? I don't think that happened here, as this player dips his shoulder a lot on drives to the basket, even when not in traffic. My assistant director was sitting with me, and his take was A1 dips to absorb contact. I personally think he does it out of instinct for no particular reason. |
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Any part of the body might be used to cause excessive contact (intentional foul) or contact intended to injure (one type of flagrant foul). So those are what I'd look for -- not the shoulder specifically -- to call those types of foul. A simple PC foul is more likely, as it's uncommon to cause excessive or flagrant contact with the shoulder.
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Cheers, mb |
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