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Picking battles
Did some high school summer tournaments this weekend and picked a battle with a coach. He insisted to give "instructions" to his players during free throws. Of course, it was during the opponents free throws. I asked him to refrain from speaking during the free throw and he became flabbergasted
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I am going to be a p{}~k but based on the plays as described, I would not go looking for this... Sounds like coach was instructing/coaching...unless he is screaming the instructions, I d leave it alone....
I have done ball a long time and at several levels and cannot think of a time when a coach's behavior would rise to disconcerting... |
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Good job, reffish. You properly enforced the rule.
Doesn't matter if he hasn't seen it done in 35 years of coaching. There are several officials who would never call this either, but that doesn't make them right. It just means that they choose not to bother with it. If you believe that what the coach is doing is distracting to the opposing FT shooter, then you are correct to call a violation for disconcertion. If it is persistent or unsporting, then you are correct to also charge a technical foul to the offending coach. |
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But the 2nd half?!?!?! He's disconcerting from the backcourt 28' line to the frontcourt FT line extended? IDK ![]() Sounds like the other team talked you into something or you just didnt have enough to do already. The terms you provided that the coach used are things I hear coaches & players say all the time in a FT situation. I'd never tell a coach he cant talk... simply show the delayed FT violation mechanic. But be prepared to follow up with a T ![]()
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I gotta new attitude! |
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Especially in the 2nd half.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Then Again...
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![]() ________________________________________________ BTW, I'm still trying to settle the question: if the disconcertion is committed by bench personnel such that it merits a call, must the penalty be a T for unsporting conduct, or would the penalty be a substitute free throw as per 9-1-3c whereby "No opponent" includes bench personnel as well as players on the floor? I've squeezed by rulebook and casebook like a sponge, and I can't find anything that would preclude calling a violation on the bench personnel in this instance. The only thing opposing that is the apparent sentiment that a violation cannot ever be called on a non-player(s) which I also cannot find. Any further definitive conclusions to share beyond what was given in the previously hijacked thread?
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Making Every Effort to Be in the Right Place at the Right Time, Looking at the Right Thing to Make the Right Call Last edited by Freddy; Tue Jun 21, 2011 at 01:16pm. |
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I don't think it's picking a battle. I think it's calling the game by the rules.
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"...as cool as the other side of the pillow." - Stuart Scott "You should never be proud of doing the right thing." - Dean Smith |
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