Clock management in high school game (no shot clock)
In a game tonight there was 4 seconds left when teem A stole the ball. The player proceeded down court and was called for a traveling violation. The whistle blew and the clock was stopped with .9 seconds left. The coach from team B complained that too much time ran off the clock. The officials conferred and the clock was reset to 3.9 seconds. First of all the officials were not looking at the clock and had no clue. Correct me if I am wrong, but in high school can an official add time like that? There is no way he would know wat to reset it too.
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When resetting any clock, they should have definite knowledge of what to set it to. Especially in cases at the end of a quarter, the non-calling official should look at the clock when his partner sounds the whistle. (You're supposed to do it all game long, but I understand if > 50% don't do this.) But to only take off 0.1 seconds certainly isn't correct. You can't catch and travel within 1/10th of a second. |
Channeling my inner Rut here, but I suspect there's mote to this story.
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The referee may correct an obvious mistake by the timer to start or stop the clock properly only when he/she has definite information relative to the time involved. The exact time observed by the official may be placed on the clock. ...and 5-10-2 If the referee determines that the clock malfunctioned or was not started/stopped properly, or if the clock did not run, an official's count or other official information may be used to make a correction. I agree with JugglingRef, it's hard to believe 1/10 of a second ran off the clock on a travel. |
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