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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 06:32am
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Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
If it gives you the same result, what are we arguing about? I thought you had said that you could not T a guy for dunking if he wasn't a team member. Is this not the case?
Just to be accurate, in post #28 of this thread you said that if someone is in uniform and warming up with the team, you can "T" that person up if he dunks. I don't agree with that at all. Whether you can "T" that person up depends on whether that person is bench personnel or not. If that person is not bench personnel, just have that person removed from the court. The only way that you could T this person up is by labelling him a team follower and using R2-8-1. That rule should only be used under extreme circumstances. If the person is bench personnel, find out whether that person is also a team member. If he is a team member, you can assess a "T" under R10-3-3 if they dunk. If he is not a team member, assess a "T" under R10-4-1 if they dunk.

That's the distinctions by rule that I've been trying to point out.

And also please note that I'm also still waiting for someone...anyone.... to find something....anything....under NFHS rules that says that the officials can actually do or are supposed to do something....anything... if their pre-game count of people warming up doesn't match the number of people listed as team members in the score book.

Last edited by Jurassic Referee; Wed Aug 11, 2010 at 06:42am.
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 09:49am
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Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee View Post
And also please note that I'm also still waiting for someone...anyone.... to find something....anything....under NFHS rules that says that the officials can actually do or are supposed to do something....anything... if their pre-game count of people warming up doesn't match the number of people listed as team members in the score book.
I think BillyMac has already conceded that, as you know, there is no RULE prescribing what action should be taken if the number of team members warming up does not match the number of names in the scorebook. However, any official worth a 5th-grade-game-paycheck will use just a little "preventative officiating" and mention to the coach that there aren't enough names in the book. That way, we don't have to resort to the RULE about what to do when a name is added after the 10-minute mark; which, again, you already know.
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 01:02pm
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Originally Posted by Scrapper1 View Post
I think BillyMac has already conceded that, as you know, there is no RULE prescribing what action should be taken if the number of team members warming up does not match the number of names in the scorebook. However, any official worth a 5th-grade-game-paycheck will use just a little "preventative officiating" and mention to the coach that there aren't enough names in the book. That way, we don't have to resort to the RULE about what to do when a name is added after the 10-minute mark; which, again, you already know.
That covers more people warming up than names in the book. What action should any official worth a 5th grade game paycheck take if there are fewer people warming up than there are names in the book? And why?
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 02:39pm
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Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee View Post
That covers more people warming up than names in the book. What action should any official worth a 5th grade game paycheck take if there are fewer people warming up than there are names in the book? And why?
I'm slowly working up to that level, so let me take a stab at it. What we've done for years at the 4th grade level is take a count of players during warm-ups to compare to what's written the book, strictly for "preventative officiating". In other words, if the number of players on the floor agrees with the book, or is less than what's in the book, we're good, and there's nothing more to do. If the number on the floor is greater than what's in the book, we try to find out why. Did a player not get listed in the book? Is someone on the freshman (oops...3rd grade) team warming up, and they will never get in the game? We ask the coach and scorekeeper, get an answer, fix anything that needs to be fixed, and away we go.

I know some officials who take the book to each coach to have them verify all the names and numbers prior to the 10-minute mark. I always ask them why, and they tell me the same thing - it is preventative officiating, and if there are any book issues later, it would be easy to see it's 100% the coach's fault. I believe the IHSA also recently started requiring officals to do that in post-season games.

There's obviously no requirement otherwise to do it, but I think the reason a lot do it is because they want to avoid issuing penalties for "technicalities", rather than issues involving the game itself.
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 03:25pm
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Originally Posted by M&M Guy View Post
In other words, if the number of players on the floor agrees with the book, or is less than what's in the book, we're good, and there's nothing more to do.
Agree.
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 02:46pm
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Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee View Post
That covers more people warming up than names in the book. What action should any official worth a 5th grade game paycheck take if there are fewer people warming up than there are names in the book? And why?
Keep an eye out for more players coming from the locker room. Other than that, since there is no penalty to be avoided through preventative officiating, there's no need to take any action.

The goal is to keep the game from being decided by a scorekeeper's error. Since points aren't going to be scored from too many names in the book, there's no need to worry about it.
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Old Wed Aug 11, 2010, 03:53pm
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Originally Posted by Eastshire View Post
Keep an eye out for more players coming from the locker room. Other than that, since there is no penalty to be avoided through preventative officiating, there's no need to take any action.

The goal is to keep the game from being decided by a scorekeeper's error. Since points aren't going to be scored from too many names in the book, there's no need to worry about it.
I would also add, that it may also jog the coaches memory. When I have more players in the book than I do on the floor I ask the coach is they are aware of that and if anyone else is coming. Usually, a player is sick or suspended or whatever and the scorebook keeper just copies one game to the next. THey also may have replaced a 'missing' player with someone else that may or may not be in the book. Or the coach may be expecting more people to come out of the training room/locker room then are in the book.
To me it is good preventative officiating, even though there is no rule!
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