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Ignoring the DOG (no - not when he has to go outside) :)
I was talking with a fellow official the other day and he said he had a situation that came up and he wondered if he did the right thing. NF rules - team A scores a basket really late in a close game and now trails by 3. B1 takes the ball OOB to inbound with 4 seconds left. Team A is out of timeouts. B1 is just going to stand there and let the clock run out. A1 reaches over the line to get a DOG warning and stop the clock. We all know the rule states we are to ignore this if, in our opinion, that's the purpose of the action. My friend said he knew team A already had one DOG and this would have been their second, which would result in a technical. He ignored it and the clock ran out.
He left the court before coach A could yell at him for not calling it. He thought that since it would have given team B two shots and the ball back, maybe he should have called it, since (in his opinion - I disagreed) calling the technical would have given team B more of an advantage in winning the game. I asked him how calling the T could possibly resulted in more of an advantage for team B than just letting the clock run out and therefore winning the game? He just shrugged. My question is - can you think of any situation in which you wouldn't ignore the DOG in that type of situation? BTW - I remembered a game many years ago when, in a very similar situation, team A requested a timeout, knowing they were out of them just to stop the clock. They figured there was at least a sliver of a chance that team B would miss their free throws on the T and perhaps allow team A to steal the inbound pass. I guess they could also have committed an intentional foul and taken the same chance.
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IMO -- The rule to ignore the DOG in your friend's sitch was written to mitigate an unintended consequence of the larger DOG rule, rather than to confer a certain advantage or disadvantage in the larger balancing equation. So there's no judgment involved in deciding whether some hypothetical advantage may or may not be available.
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Woof, Woof ...
BOUNDARY-PLANE WARNING – LAST SECOND TACTIC
9.2.10 SITUATION: A1 is out of bounds for a throw-in. B1 reaches through the boundary plane and knocks the ball out of A1’s hands. Team B has not been warned previously for a throw-in plane infraction. RULING: B1 is charged with a technical foul and it also results in the official having a team warning recorded and reported to the head coach. COMMENT: In situations with the clock running and five or less seconds left in the game, a throw-in plane violation or interfering with the ball following a goal should be ignored if its only purpose is to stop the clock. However, if the tactic in any way interferes with the thrower’s efforts to make a throw-in, a technical foul for delay shall be called even though no previous warning had been issued. In this situation, if the official stopped the clock and issued a team warning, it would allow the team to benefit from the tactic. (4- 47-1; 10-1-5c)
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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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Belated April Fool's Joke ???
Quote:
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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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