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Ringers ???
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I'm a former ref and a current coach. I am on the side of getting the call right. I really appreciate when officials confer regardless if the call is changed or not. I think it shows professionalism, teamwork, and a genuine concern for the integrity of the game. In my experience, those willing to ask/listen for/to help are usually the best refs. They are confident enough in their abilities that their ego isn't involved.
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Peace |
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There's a gym supervisor who's there to keep the official's accountable, and all that needs to be done is to stand next to players during their layup drills and have them point to their picture as they're standing in line. If there's an issue the opposing team can get one of its team members to get the supervisor and adjudicate the issue. What's specifically going on at these games is that the players are competing at the same grade level with a two year age window which means that they've got to get their players certified before the "aau (fall, winter, spring, summer) league" starts. And that's what I was doing five-ten minutes before the game started. |
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Again, let me repeat for the nth time before I get bonked again, that I approached my partner in an overbearing fashion which created the fallout thereafter. I'm merely here to ask how to respectfully confer with your partner over such matters and thankfully I have at least the video of a similar situation during a D1 game to look over and learn. edit: I'm noting that I'm on the same page as Coach Bill who posted prior to this one. |
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I was at a meeting tonight where a Final Four official was the main speaker and in his opinion the reason he was where he was is because he "minds his business" most of the time. He was talking about not taking over games and making calls for his partners. He is about as respected an officials as anyone in the country and he feels he should let his partners work. We are all put on the game for a reason, if they cannot do their job it is not my job to save them or to ask them "Are you sure?" every time there is a close call. Basketball officials do not confer on foul calls unless we have a double whistle (and even then we agree or let our partner take the call), so why would we confer on other calls where someone sees the play completely in their primary? Maybe I have a different idea of professionalism. Peace |
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Peace |
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As I just indicated all of these are judgment plays. I'm referring to rule mistakes. Examples of these include awarding the ball to the wrong team after an alternating possession where there was a technical foul during the last one; awarding a one-and-one when a team is not in bonus; taking away a team's privilege to run the baseline after a foul/violation on the throw-in on a made basket; not calling a violation on a free throw that doesn't hit the rim; continuing a ten-second count and thereby calling a violation off an interrupted possession where the ball went out of bounds in the backcourt and the same team inbounds the ball; awarding a basket on a field goal try with less than three tenths of a second remaining. Take for example the last one. You're coming out of a timeout with less than three-tenths of a second remaining. Your partner is the trail and you are the lead. The play is in your partner's area, he sees a player catch the throw-in and immediately throw it at the basket and the ball goes in - Derek Fisher style. He turns around to the table and indicates to the table to score the basket and award the team with the win. What are you going to do? Bottom line is, if your job is to "judge" plays then you ought to know when to confer with your partner over a call as that is part of the play as you're still responsible to judge whether the call by your partner merited a mini-conference to make sure as a crew you got the call right based on the rules. Again, I'm asking how to respectfully confer with your partner over a particular call. Not every call, not judgment calls where your partner is on top of the play, but on those rare calls where your partner might have missed something you definitely saw, or a call that was based on a misinterpretation or ignorance of a rule regardless of your position or what you saw. Maybe this time, on the eight page of this thread, people who have been criticizing me will finally understand my question. |
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Then again this is a last second shot situation, this is not a travel in the middle of the 1st quarter. I see more travels I disagree with and I have yet to see an official come to someone and ask an official about the rules in those cases, like calling a travel on a legal jump stop. Those are rules based too, not just judgment calls. Quote:
Peace |
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but, when a partner does come in...do they really come to you with the above attitude? We pre-game something like this...(and it is usually for OOB calls) "...if you think you kicked the call (roar of the crowd/players/coach) then give me a look...(if I have information, and maybe even if I don't);) I'll point the "CORRECT" direction...you blow your whistle and YOU change it...and away we go...don't waste a lot of time on it." Sure, sometimes a partner might have to come in and give another partner some information, "unsolicited"...but, you better make sure you are 100% correct and it needs to be corrected. Even then...I am not about to tell my partner that "it cannot be this or cannot be that"...I give them the information I have and let them decide if they want to change THEIR CALL. |
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