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Remember: Stay alive during end-of-game situations...
There's video of this on YouTube but you really can't see the clock issue. R1 passed the ball to R2 OOB along the end line. The clock started when R2 caught the ball. The half-second which ran off was most likely the difference between Rider's shot being ruled good.
========================== EDISON, N.J. (AP) -- The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference has suspended the three officials who worked Sunday's Rider-Niagara game where a late clock error changed the outcome. The MAAC said in a statement Monday that the officials will miss one game for failure to note the game clock starting early on the key inbounds play in the final seconds. Ali Langford's dunk with 3.7 seconds left gave Niagara an 84-82 lead. Following a Rider timeout, the game clock started before the Broncs inbounded the ball but it wasn't noticed. Jonathan Thompson hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer that would have given Rider the win, but after a TV review, officials ruled time had expired before Thompson released the shot. The MAAC also publicly reprimanded Niagara's game clock operator and replay system operator for failure to manage the clock and replay system in the expected manner. A school spokesman did not release the names of the two on Monday. The win came six days after Brandon Penn's 3-pointer with 1 second left gave Rider a 74-73 win over Niagara. |
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I thought in D1 that the clock was started by the wireless device that's on the officials waistband?
A mini-season ticket package (with seats near one of the end lines) gets me to several D1 games per year at a nearby A10 school. I've noticed how the official administering a throw-in is doing his five second count with one hand, while the other hand is on the device, and then have observed the "chop" and the flick of the device switch when the throw in has been legally touched in-bounds. So, I've always thought that the on floor officials were starting the clock. Is that in fact the case? Can someone fill me in as just how those devices work, and the whole clock starting procedure when those devices are being used in a game? |
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I've never used it, so I can't explain any other intricacies of it that may impact a play like this, either. |
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There are lower level schools who also use the PTS. My last PTS game a player requested a time-out and I blew my whistle but then for some reason I reached for the button and pressed it which started the clock again. ![]()
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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My limited experience is the reverse of this. The clock operator is the failsafe for the officials' pressing the PTS button on the pack. Especially important for close, end of game situations where teams may be delaying touching the throw-in to prevent the clock from starting. I don't want the table starting it when I'm 8 feet from the touch/no touch. - And that's covered in the locker room with the table crew.
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I can't remember the last time I wasn't at least kind-of tired. Last edited by HawkeyeCubP; Tue Feb 14, 2012 at 12:33pm. |
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What Time is it??
The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference has suspended the three officials who worked Sunday's Rider-Niagara game where a late clock error changed the outcome.
The MAAC said in a statement Monday that the officials — listed on the box score as Rusty Cooper, Tony Crisp and Kenneth Clark — will miss one game for failure to note the game clock starting early on the key inbounds play in the final seconds. Ali Langford's dunk with 3.7 seconds left gave Niagara an 84-82 lead. Following a Rider timeout, the game clock started before the Broncs inbounded the ball but it wasn't noticed. Jonathan Thompson hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer that would have given Rider the win, but after a TV review, officials ruled time had expired before Thompson released the shot. The MAAC also publicly reprimanded Niagara's game clock operator and replay system operator for failure to manage the clock and replay system in the expected manner. A school spokesman did not release the names of the two on Monday. |
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Fair is fair, they were not blameless either.
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Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers |
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The first bullet point under using the monitor (at least in the women's game) under NCAA guidelines from this year's clinic is "Determine what is being reviewed." Basically, you can't go to the monitor looking for one thing and then deal with another. |
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If you didn't notice / suspect it before you went to the monitor, you'd only look at the last second (or so) of the play -- not the error that happened 3 seconds earlier. IOW, you'd start at about the time the plaeyer who shot caught the ball (or the pass was thrown to him); you wouldn[t go all the way back to the inbounds play.
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Welpe-I agree completely with you! We're accountable for a mistake at the table just as much as you all are on the floor.If the guys on court are named in the announcement then the table crew should be named in it as well.After all we're a team in there and we share our success and faliures together.
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