Well, let me start off by saying I've done very few (ok, 1) games with a monitor.
Quote:
Originally Posted by All_Heart
I am trying to understand the rule so that I do it correct when I am on the court. This might actually be the proper protocol based on AR.35 "...since the officials are unable to determine if the shot clock was improperly reset they are permitted to use the monitor to make this determination...".  I guess this means that officials can go to the monitor at any point in the game to see if a player gained possession in order to determine if the shot clock should or should not have been reset. I'm not sure that this is what was intended when the rule was written, but maybe it was.
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As I understand it, there are plays that
shall be reviewed, and plays that
may be reviewed. All others
cannot be reviewed. The key is knowing the difference. In this case, correcting a timing error is one of the plays that officials may use the monitor. Perhaps the officials didn't see the change of possession, but did notice the reset of the shot clock, and wanted to check the monitor to see if there was a timing mistake. They checked it, saw the shot was indeed reset properly, because of the COP. My guess is if the shot clock had not been reset, they might have left it alone because they were not sure about the COP. The other possibility is they did see the change, and were checking to see if time should've come off the shot clock (maybe 2 or 3 seconds) based on not knowing how close the COP happened to the held ball. But you are right they cannot go to the monitor to simply see if there was a possession change. The key is knowing exactly why you are checking, and if that reason is specifically allowed by rule.
Quote:
Originally Posted by All_Heart
There was a play in the North Carolina/Rhode Island NIT game were the ball was batted toward the basket on a rebound and it hit the ring but IMO it was not a try so the shot clock should not have been reset. A shooting foul was called shortly after when they really shouldn't have had the chance to be shooting. An official on the court did recognize the situation at hand and discussed it with another official but they did not go to the monitor. At the time I was thinking oh well I guess they can't go to the monitor and that was a really difficult play. In hindsight I guess they absolutely should have gone to the monitor.
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I'm not following - are you saying (a) the shot clock should've expired before they foul occured? Or (b) they called it a shooting foul on the bat? I believe in (a) the monitor can only be used to correct timing issues in the same shot clock period, and in (b) you cannot use it to determine what type of personal foul (shooting vs. non-shooting).
Quote:
Originally Posted by All_Heart
I think the rule should be rewritten so that officials are allowed to go to the monitor to see if a foul was flagrant OR intentional. Otherwise some officials will do it anyway for that purpose (under the guise of flagrant) and it will not be used consistently across the country.
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I don't see that being much of an issue, as officials at that level can pretty tell an intentional vs. common. But it's harder to tell the flagrant vs. intentional level, or even the off-ball crap that's missed altogether that there is a need for the monitor.