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IAABO oob sideline mechanics
So our board is new to using IAABO mechanics. I am a little confused.
If you read pages 21-23 of the IAABO manual it seems me that the trail has OOB responsibility if the ball is on the opposite side of the court from which they are standing on and it the ball is above the FT line extended. Am I correct?? It seems illogical to me but the manual leads me to believe I am correct. |
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Yep -- and that's the tradeoff. A difficult call on the sideline (at least on some plays) vs. staying in the primary and officiating the post.
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Crews of 3 across the board would ultimately solve that problem.
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I gotta new attitude! |
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As far as the Lead having to officiate his sideline plus the post, the L should still have awareness of where the ball is and if it goes OOB. And when it goes out on his line and he doesn't know what caused it then that is the purpose of blowing your whistle and asking for help.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Of course not, I thought we were talking sanctioned ball games. Proper technique BNR! I hate it when a partner doesnt know & doesnt blow I think I'll add this to my pregame, depending on who I'm with.
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I gotta new attitude! |
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No matter who has primary on this, the other official needs to be able to help, and needs to know when s/he can help (and when s/he can't). If "A crew of 3 would not make sense in Rec Leagues and kiddie leagues and most intramural leagues" (and I agree), recognize that what you're saying is that this call is going to get missed some of the time, and that's a fair tradeoff. After all, if this call (and others, of course) never got missed in 2-person, there would never be a reason for three officials. |
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I agree. 2-person is just going to miss a few of these tightrope calls on the L's sideline out high (or in the backcourt). Short of going all the wall across to the opposite sideline, the trail is just not going to have a view down the line to see the player barely step on the line (or not) and the lead may or may not be able to look out there. The lead should generally be able to look since it is unlikely that there will be post activity that matters when the ball is that far out and at risk of being OOB.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Out Of Bounds Responsibilities ...
IAABO mechanics, my little corner of Connecticut style:
When Trail is not across the basketline: Lead had frontcourt endline, and nearer sideline back to the division line. Trail has nearer sideline, division line, and all three backcourt boundaries. When Trail is across the basketline: Lead had frontcourt endline, and nearer sideline to the free throw line Extended. Trail has nearer sideline, farther sideline above free throw line extended, division line, and all three backcourt boundaries. During transition, press, and press break, situations, the Lead, hanging back to help, will have out of bounds responsibilities on the entire nearer sideline.
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"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” (Matthew 25:36) |
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