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When contact occurs in a game that affects the play (and an advantage is gained) and a foul is not called, players assume that a penalty will not be enforced and continue that behavior/action later in the game. Physical play ultimately escalates into situtations that become a problem - hard fouls, intentional fouls, unsportsman-like plays, etc. It is usually a result of not blowing the whistle earlier in the game. If officials blow the whistle and establish early what contact is a foul and what is not, then the players will adjust (or sit on the bench after fouling out). When officials are rather passive and let too much contact occur between players, that is when problems build and become a problem later in the game. That is when officials, by their lack of game control, create the circumstances that often lead to problems in games. I hope you are reading this in the moderate tone that I intend to communicate. Too many times posts on this board are extrapolated to their extremes and viewed in a "black or white" perspective. I'm not advocating that passing on minor contact will lead to a fight in the 4th qtr., nor do I think that "the more fouls called in a game, the better"....I believe that, in general, officials could, and should, call more fouls than we do in games. It will make for a better game and will definitely lead to less problems (and phone calls from assignors) in the future. |
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I might be an "extrapolator" here but, for the sake of everyone, hear we would be safe to say that by "too much contact" you mean ILLEGAL contact, correct?? Cause I know in the leagues I work there is a lot of very physical contact and it is still legal. So to say "too much contact" would not be correct, but if I am reading too much into it I apologize. I just don't want people on here thinking that mere fact that there is a lot of contact that it should be a foul. Too much contact is not a foul, illegal contact is a foul. WOW!!! Am I becoming the new Jurassic cause I just feel like this is something he would say?????? ha
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"players must decide the outcome of the game with legal actions, not illegal actions which an official chooses to ignore." |
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"When contact occurs in a game that affects the play (and an advantage is gained) and a foul is not called, players assume that a penalty will not be enforced and continue that behavior/action later in the game." |
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The player will invariably feel that the contact affected the play and put him/her at a disadvantage. The official...not so much so. One side is naturally biased; the other side can't afford to be biased. That's the flaw in your reasoning imo. |
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i think you may be combining the complaints that you hear from fans/players/coaches during games with the opinions of officials (mine, in this case) that are shared in this forum. they are two different things coming from completely different perspectives. just watch how much contact is allowed to happen that affects the play. it's the reason why the NCAA has instituted the "automatic" fouls last year - contact that causes the ball handler to fall = foul; contact that interrupts RSBQ (rhythm, speed, balance, quickness) = foul. |
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It's the fans who think we need to "blow our whistles more," except when we do against their team and then we need to "let them play." |
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In the end it does not matter what we call. We cannot win, EVER!!!
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Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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You must have been at my games this weekend?
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![]() I am so tired of this.......
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There was the person who sent ten puns to friends, with the hope that at least one of the puns would make them laugh. No pun in ten did. |
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Officials are neutral; players and coaches aren't. And that's why the person with the whistle has to prevail, no matter what anyone else in the gym might think. |
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I agree again with JR.
The best example of this was the playoffs this year in my Regional Tournament. There was a team that I had multiple times that every time something happen they thought we should have a foul. Then every time we called a foul on them they complained. We called a lot of fouls and this team was not ever happy. And as usual they never complain about fouls we call in their favor. I agree that we could call more fouls, but that is based on a lot of factors. And if players cannot control their emotions or their behavior because they think something is happening, then they either need to learn the game or learn to adjust. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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