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Michigan v. Kansas
There was <del>a held ball</del> travelling called at <del>some point (can't recall the time)</del> 8:25 of the 2nd half, where a Michigan player had the ball in the paint and went up for a shot. The L called <del>a held ball</del> travelling at the same time the C was signalling a tip (or loose ball). Looked like the L was straight-lined. Did anyone see this?
And, 5 seconds left in overtime -- does Kansas 15 travel before he kicks the ball out? |
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Edit: Wait, the NCAA box score has an entry: Turnover, Mitch McGary (travelling), 8:25 2nd half Edit2: That is the play I am talking about. Travelling, not a held ball. |
Late in the overtime, the talking heads were making a big deal about stopping play to check the time when neither team had a time out left. I can why the officials want to check and not be criticized later. Having said that, Michigan got the ball with 45.0 seconds left in the game. A shot clock violation occurred, do you really need to check the monitor? In the NBA, the officials would have told the operator to put 10.0 seconds on the clock, it would have taken 2 seconds to do so.
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Now, if the shot wasn't off in time, then you'd be right - just reset the clock. |
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