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Old Wed Jan 02, 2013, 11:19pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BktBallRef View Post
Really? We're not supposed to say the color and point when each team comes out of time-out or intermission?
I think that JetMet is really saying that it is not our responsibility to REMIND EACH TEAM which direction they are going following each time out. This play is only marginally different from the stack "loop" sideline inbounds play in which a player cuts back toward the backcourt and then loops around (frequently with the help of a screen) toward their attacking basket.

I had BOTH TEAMS in a 5th grade travel game go the wrong way following a throw-in after a timeout. And, YES, I clearly indicated with a signal and a verbal indication the direction of the team taking the throw-in. The throw-in team shot at the wrong basket. The other team got the rebound and went rapidly toward the division line. That team's coach yelled, "there going the wrong way" -- to which I responded, "I know." Fortunately, for him, he called time out BEFORE the player committed a violation.

The coach of the throw-in team was LIVID -- at HIS OWN TEAM -- as he actually had set up an inbounds play that they did not execute!!! As a coach, I have called many, many plays (like the "loop" play or screen-the-screener under the basket) that are 100% designed to deceive the defense into thinking my player was doing one thing when he was really doing something completely different.

This play is little different. This is a COACH problem -- for the defending team!!!
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Old Thu Jan 03, 2013, 11:39am
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A friend of mine was on a team in high school and run this play. Only they called it "ACT" in reference to the ACT test bc they said their opponents and rivals weren't smart enough to know it was coming.

On a side note the coachs of each team were former high school teammates.
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Old Thu Jan 03, 2013, 03:18pm
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When I coached freshman basketball I tried to run this play once and ended up getting a T.

I told my guys to line up, and the inbounder was to tell the inbounding official that we knew which way we were going, as such and let the officials do their thing and put the ball in play. The other team was confused but the inbounding official held up the game and told the opposing team to stay on that side because we were lined up on the wrong end of the court, and that my guys are lined up on the wrong side. Well I went ape and then I was sitting for the second half. That basket would have cut our deficit to 20
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Old Thu Jan 03, 2013, 04:14pm
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So the T was not for running the play, but for your reaction to the ref giving away the play? Nice
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