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Opposing players stay backcourt
GV tonight. Team A has a hot-shot who has made everything she looked at for three quarters. For the fourth quarter, Team B puts a defender in her shorts full court and is shutting her down. You know the routine: Hot-shot gets frustrated and commits a couple of pushing fouls trying to get open. Things are getting chippy, so she and the defender are being watched closely. Next time up the court for Team A, Hot-shot and defender-in-shorts stay in the backcourt. Ball is in frontcourt and I'm Trail trying to referee my primary AND watch these two knuckleheads in the backcourt. Should I merely open up and try to referee both?
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Robby |
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Or worse. Had something like this in a BJV game once. Hot shot traveled due to defensive pressure and was clearly upset and frustrated....instead of hustling back down court on defense, he held back....gut feel told me something bad was about to happen so I hung back a little - caught the hot shot trying to throw a deliberate elbow to the other one's head/neck area...earned himself a flagrant T for that one.
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Meddle not in the affairs of dragons - for thou art crunchy and taste good with ketchup! |
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whenever you have identified a troublemaker(s), you MUST watch them at all times. easier said than done in a 2-person game, but you CANNOT take your eyes off of them...let your partner officiate the other 8 players as best he/she can....
i guess the question i would ask myself is: "which will cause more problems in this game - a missed travel/foul by the 8 players OR a missed elbow to the back of the head by a troublemaker?" |
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One possibility, expecially if A is not directly attacking the basket, is to blow your whistle and loudly tell A1 and B1 to knock it off, or tell your partner that you will stay back to watch, or someother way get the message to the players / coaches. Good coaches will help you with the players (either by talking to them, or taking them out of the game).
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One possibility, expecially if A is not directly attacking the basket, is to blow your whistle and loudly tell A1 and B1 to knock it off, or tell your partner that you will stay back to watch, or someother way get the message to the players / coaches. Good coaches will help you with the players (either by talking to them, or taking them out of the game).
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2 or 3 person I've found the "put em on blast" method to be quite effective. In your sitch prior to the FT being administered, "partner, I've got WHITE 14 & BLUE 11 in the backcourt."
They know you're watching, their coaches know & the fans know. Unless they are a couple of knuckleheads they generally knock it off. If not, we all know where to send knuckleheads.
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