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Section 5. Officials Use of Replay/Television Equipment Art. 1. Officials may use court-side replay equipment, videotape or television monitoring only in situations involved in preventing or rectifying a scoring or timing mistake or malfunctioning game clocks or shot clocks, to determine if a fight occurred and those individuals who participated in a fight, or to assess whether correctable errors 2-10.1.c, d, or e need to be rectified. Art. 2. At the end of the second half or at the end of any extra period, the officials shall use replay equipment, videotape or television monitoring B R -3 3 RULE 2-5/OFFICIALS AND THEIR DUTIES that is located on a designated court-side table (i.e., within approximately 3 to 12 feet of the playing court), when such equipment is available, to ascertain whether a try for field goal that will determine the outcome of a game (win, lose, tie), and is attempted at or near the expiration of the game clock, was released before the sounding of the period-ending horn. A.R. 5. A1 releases a try for goal near or at the expiration of time for the game. The official rules the field goal to be a successful two-point goal. Before an official goes to a courtside monitor to confirm the status of the play, the coach from Team A requests a correctable error on the grounds that the goal was counted erroneously and three points should have been awarded. R U L I N G : It shall be permissible for the officials to use the court-side monitor to determine if a goal has been counted erroneously. The officials shall notify the coaches of both teams of their intention to use the court-side monitor for this purpose. When the coachÂ’s appeal is ruled to be incorrect, a 75-second timeout in games not involving electronic media or either a 60- or 30-second timeout in games involving electronic media shall be charged to his or her team. When that timeout excedes the allotted number, an indirect technical foul shall be assessed. The officials shall be required to use the court-side monitor to ascertain whether a try for field goal that is game-deciding or will determine whether there is an(other) extra period was taken at or near the expiration of the game clock was released before or after the sounding of the game-clock horn. Art. 3. Officials shall be permitted to consult a court-side monitor to determine if a try for goal is a two- or three-point attempt, regardless of whether the try is successful. Art. 4. Officials shall not use a court-side monitor or court-side videotape for judgment calls such as who fouled, basket interference, goaltending or release of the ball before the sounding of the horn, with the exception of the situations described in Rules 2-5.2 and 2-5.3. |
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