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Ref Daddy Sat Dec 21, 2002 11:06am

How does one signal and communicate a "warning" such as intruding over the end line on a throw in.

By rule each team gets 1.

How to signal it in a loud guy (non verbally)?
How does your partner pick it up?
Where does it go in the scorebook?

ChuckElias Sat Dec 21, 2002 11:56am

Quote:

Originally posted by Ref Daddy
How does one signal and communicate a "warning" such as intruding over the end line on a throw in.

By rule each team gets 1.


Each team gets up to 3 ;) One for breaking the throw-in plane, one for touching the ball after a made basket, one for huddling during free throw administration.

Quote:

How to signal it in a loud guy (non verbally)?
How does your partner pick it up?


There's no official signal, if that's what you're asking. I blow the whistle, and announce it as loud as I can. "Warning for breaking the plane!" If the scorer or my partner doesn't hear me then I go directly to the table.

Quote:

Where does it go in the scorebook?
At the bottom of the page.

Chuck

[Edited by ChuckElias on Dec 23rd, 2002 at 09:23 AM]

Jurassic Referee Sat Dec 21, 2002 12:28pm

Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:

Originally posted by Ref Daddy
How does one signal and communicate a "warning" such as intruding over the end line on a throw in.

There's no official signal, if that's what you're asking. I blow the whistle, and announce it as loud as I can. "Warning for breaking the plane!" If the scorer or my partner doesn't hear me then I go directly to the table.

Where does it go in the scorebook?

At the bottom of the page.[/B][/QUOTE]Chuck,you're supposed to report it directly to the scorer,and then you must report it directly to the coach of the team that you warned.R2-7-10.You go to both of them.

klancie Mon Dec 23, 2002 09:52am

[QUOTE]Originally posted by ChuckElias
Each team gets up to 3 ;) One for breaking the throw-in plane, one for touching the ball after a made basket, one for huddling during free throw administration.

I was thinking that a team got only 1 warning, and then the next delay of any kind was a technical, as opposed to getting up to 3 warnings. Perhaps I was wrong...

ChuckElias Mon Dec 23, 2002 10:23am

Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Chuck,you're supposed to report it directly to the scorer,and then you must report it directly to the coach of the team that you warned.R2-7-10.You go to both of them.
I do this by announcing it loudly for everybody at the same time. Physically going to the table and then to the coach only prolongs the illegal delay.

Chuck

Mark Dexter Mon Dec 23, 2002 11:08am

Quote:

Originally posted by klancie

I was thinking that a team got only 1 warning, and then the next delay of any kind was a technical, as opposed to getting up to 3 warnings. Perhaps I was wrong...

Nope. Each warning is separate.

If you look at 10-1-5 c and d, they mention that a technical foul is issued after warning "for this delay." A team can break the plane, interfere with the ball after a goal, and huddle before a FT once each during a game and not get penalized.

Jurassic Referee Mon Dec 23, 2002 12:52pm

Quote:

Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Chuck,you're supposed to report it directly to the scorer,and then you must report it directly to the coach of the team that you warned.R2-7-10.You go to both of them.
I do this by announcing it loudly for everybody at the same time. Physically going to the table and then to the coach only prolongs the illegal delay.

Chuck,when this rule first came out,we were told that we HAD to go the table to make sure that it was recorded properly,and then to the head coach in his bench area to give him the warning.That's the procedure that we insist on our guys using.I just checked with a coupla supervisors,and they said that that is the only accepted procedure in their area.If the coach to be warned happens to be at the far end of the gym,do you just holler it at him/her?What do you do if it's a noisy gym?What do you do if the coach isn't looking at you?How do you handle it if you call a T later,and the coach then claims that he/she never heard the first warning?

What is the meaning of life?

Inquiring minds need to know!!

PS-what do other areas do?

[Edited by Jurassic Referee on Dec 23rd, 2002 at 11:55 AM]

ChuckElias Mon Dec 23, 2002 01:51pm

Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
What do you do if it's a noisy gym?
As I said earlier, if I feel the scorer (and now I'll add "or coach") hasn't understood or hasn't heard the warning, I'll go to the table to make sure they get it right.

Quote:

What is the meaning of life?
I think that the Python (Monty) troupe has some intriguing insights on this question.

Chuck

Jurassic Referee Mon Dec 23, 2002 02:55pm

[QUOTE][i]
Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
[B
Quote:

What is the meaning of life?
I think that the Python (Monty) troupe has some intriguing insights on this question.

Chuck
I KNEW that you would say something like that!That's why I threw it in there.:D

rainmaker Mon Dec 23, 2002 09:13pm

[QUOTE]Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Quote:

[i]
Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
[B
Quote:

What is the meaning of life?
I think that the Python (Monty) troupe has some intriguing insights on this question.

Chuck
I KNEW that you would say something like that!That's why I threw it in there.:D
Oh, come on, this one is easy:

The answer to life, the universe and everything is 42. I can't believe that you haven't figured this out yet!

Mark Padgett Mon Dec 23, 2002 09:17pm

Quote:

Originally posted by rainmaker

Oh, come on, this one is easy:

The answer to life, the universe and everything is 42. I can't believe that you haven't figured this out yet!

Under metric FEEBLE rules, it's 47.63 :p

Jurassic Referee Mon Dec 23, 2002 09:24pm

Quote:

Originally posted by Mark Padgett
Quote:

Originally posted by rainmaker

Oh, come on, this one is easy:

The answer to life, the universe and everything is 42. I can't believe that you haven't figured this out yet!

Under metric FEEBLE rules, it's 47.63 :p

Neither are valid in a leap year!

rainmaker Mon Dec 23, 2002 09:26pm

Quote:

Originally posted by Mark Padgett
Quote:

Originally posted by rainmaker

Oh, come on, this one is easy:

The answer to life, the universe and everything is 42. I can't believe that you haven't figured this out yet!

Under metric FEEBLE rules, it's 47.63 :p

Actually, according to Deep Thought, the universal and eternal answer is 42. The real concern is, what is the question? I don't think that Douglas Adams, from whom I am citing, ever really got that settled.


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