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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 01:39pm
Courageous When Prudent
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
I had a play where my partner called a backcourt violation on inbounds where I thought the player catching the ball inbounds did not establish team player control in the front court before going into the backcourt....?
I only bring information that is definitive. If you only "thought" you saw it one way then, IMO, you should wait until after the game (or halftime) and ask your partner what he had on that play.
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 01:43pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
I only bring information that is definitive. If you only "thought" you saw it one way then, IMO, you should wait until after the game (or halftime) and ask your partner what he had on that play.
I understand where you're coming from and I did not give the whole story as the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call. So my willingness to approach my partner was an attempt to assuage the situation and I gave my partner an out by asking him whether the player gained possession with one hand before going into the backcourt where he caught it with two hands. edit: I did not overrule him.

Unfortunately, I'm now having to address the fallout of an official who believes that the partner has no right to confer with his partner about his call. And now that I have reviewed the rulebook, none of the referee duties actually list a judgment on the play which means that it's not one of the things that cannot be questioned as this official believes it to be.

But again, I'm for a tactful response where I'm not being condescending but at the same time not willing to compromise on the principle that as a crew our main goal is to help each other out to get the call right.

Last edited by Afrosheen; Wed Oct 23, 2013 at 01:47pm.
  #3 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 01:53pm
Courageous When Prudent
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
I understand where you're coming from and I did not give the whole story as the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call. So my willingness to approach my partner was an attempt to assuage the situation and I gave my partner an out by asking him whether the player gained possession with one hand before going into the backcourt where he caught it with two hands. edit: I did not overrule him.

...
I know I'm doing the old "hindsight-20/20" thing here, but probably a good opportunity for that young official to learn how to talk to coaches. Next time you have some sort of similar situation, you could go up to the youngun' and tell him to quickly explain to the coach what he has, "Coach, I had player control in the front court", then have him move out. Then if the coach persists on commenting, you can chime in with "Coach, my partner told what he had, now we need to move on."
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 02:01pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
I understand where you're coming from and I did not give the whole story as the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call.
So your partner should have explained it to the coach and / or chosen to come to you for help. As I said before you can show body language / "the look" to try to get your partner to come to you.

Or, if you have to go to where he is to administer the throw-in, just ask your partner "everything okay?" or something to try to get him to open up for an explanation.

And, yes, it's tough to figure out what to do because every situation is a little different.
  #5 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 02:30pm
AremRed
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call. So my willingness to approach my partner was an attempt to assuage the situation
If there is a situation where you need to give your partner some information, this needs to happen before the coach gets mad, not as a result of it.
  #6 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 02:45pm
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So let me see if I have this all down correctly...

-You went to partner with info on a disputed call

-partner took offense to your coming to him

-you apologized to him at the game site

-he sent you a bitchy email in which he tries hard to find a rule book backing for his bitchiness

-you want our advice on how to deal with this situation

Is that about it???

If so, my advice would be to ask you a question...why, why, why would you want this guy working any game you assign?
  #7 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 02:50pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
I understand where you're coming from and I did not give the whole story as the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call. So my willingness to approach my partner was an attempt to assuage the situation and I gave my partner an out by asking him whether the player gained possession with one hand before going into the backcourt where he caught it with two hands. edit: I did not overrule him.
Honestly, IMHO... this added information makes it worse. The fact that coach was barking at him when you decided to add information unsolicited... I can kind of see his ire coming up for that. If he ASKS you for information, that's different. But don't pile on when coach is on him already.

As to what to do now ... I'd be with the herd. Apologize (and I DO think you owe him one ... it's not just taking the high road now), and move on.
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:06pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
Honestly, IMHO... this added information makes it worse. The fact that coach was barking at him when you decided to add information unsolicited... I can kind of see his ire coming up for that. If he ASKS you for information, that's different. But don't pile on when coach is on him already.

As to what to do now ... I'd be with the herd. Apologize (and I DO think you owe him one ... it's not just taking the high road now), and move on.
I disagree. If he's kicking a rule and you know it, you're just as wrong for letting him kick it as he is for kicking it. You're not overruling or even questioning his judgement. Now, if you're questioning his judgement, that is wrong...but that isn't what we're talking about here. If he says the player controlled it in the front court, the call stands. If he says he only tipped it, then let him know what the rule is and that, by rule, it can't be a violation and leave it to him to take it from there.

I did exactly this a couple years ago with a partner who is probably in the top 2-3 in our association. Throwin on my frontcourt endline is tipped around the FT line (no where near control) and it went into the backcourt where the offense gets the ball. He called a backcourt violation. You can bet I went out to him. He was happy to fix it once I told him that we couldn't have a backcourt violation unless he judged that tip to be player control.
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Last edited by Camron Rust; Wed Oct 23, 2013 at 04:11pm.
  #9 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:21pm
Courageous When Prudent
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
...
I did exactly this a couple years ago with a partner who is probably in the top 2-3 in our association. Throwin on my frontcourt endline is tipped around the FT line (no where near control) and it went into the backcourt where the offense gets the ball. He called a backcourt violation. You can bet I went out to him. He was happy to fix it once I told him that we couldn't have a backcourt violation unless he judged that tip to be player control.
Difference being in your case you had definite knowledge. In the OP, he "thought" player didn't have control and he was about 40' from the play.
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:25pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
Difference being in your case you had definite knowledge. In the OP, he "thought" player didn't have control and he was about 40' from the play.
Seemed like there was sufficient reason to believe his partner was kicking the rule.

And in my case, when it comes to judgement, there is no definite knowledge. Maybe my partner judged what I saw a as tip to be player control. To me it was obvious. But maybe he saw it differently. Unless I go out there to have the conversation, I would have never know and we'd have both got it wrong.

In the OP, so what if he used the word "thought". That what we judge on most of the time. He wasn't questioning the judgement of his partner, he was asking what his partner had. And if his partner said yes, there was player control, then the discussion was over. If the partner said no, then he should have then added the rule info and let his partner fix it.
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Last edited by Camron Rust; Wed Oct 23, 2013 at 04:37pm.
  #11 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:24pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
I disagree.
There's a HUGE difference between your play, where you're certain the other official made a rule error... and the OP where he thought that perhaps maybe the other official might be mistaken in judgement.

And to do it right after the coach started chewing strips away any semblance of credibility he could possibly have for the rest of that game, perhaps longer should he see this coach in the future. Don't neuter your partner.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:35pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
There's a HUGE difference between your play, where you're certain the other official made a rule error... and the OP where he thought that perhaps maybe the other official might be mistaken in judgement.

And to do it right after the coach started chewing strips away any semblance of credibility he could possibly have for the rest of that game, perhaps longer should he see this coach in the future. Don't neuter your partner.
I still disagree. If my partner can't take the heat of getting a rule wrong, that is his problem. He should know the rules...we're not talking about some esoteric corner of the rule book here. If the coach is asking about it, all the more reason to be sure we get it right. He looks worse getting it wrong and not fixing it when he had the chance than he does for getting it right with help.

He wasn't questioning judgement. He was questioning the rule application. If the calling official judged that there was player control, the discussion is over at that point. If not, then we have a rules issue.

Unless you have the conversation, you can't know what he had.
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Last edited by Camron Rust; Wed Oct 23, 2013 at 04:38pm.
  #13 (permalink)  
Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 03:00pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
I understand where you're coming from and I did not give the whole story as the coach saw it too and he became infuriated at the call.
Honestly, responding to the coach's tirade in this manner is only going to inflame the situation. Now, he's more likely to throw a fit later. He also sees your response as disagreement with your partner's call. Your partner also feels like you betrayed him.

Now, your partner's rule quote is irrelevant, but I think his overall point is valid.
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 03:52pm
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The rule reference may or may not have anything to do with the actual rule situation you experienced. But when you go to a partner, give them information, do not ask a question. If you know that the player did not have control of the ball and that was in your primary, then give that information and let him tell you there were other factors to the call. If you are not sure, then keep your mouth shut. A lot of times we "think" things and we do not have the entire story. I know the goal is to get it right, but there is a way to do it.

Now with the childish mail, I probably would not have responded. I probably would have had a phone conversation. Emails have ways of getting off the rails, especially with a newer official.

I am also not so sure about not working with this guy again. Just have a good pregame and discuss how you handle situations where you can help each other. Because if you say you do not want to work with this person, it is going to end up with the email exchange and the assignor asking, "What is with this?" We all work with people that we are not in love with and this would be no different. Do your job, be professional and move on.

Peace
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Old Wed Oct 23, 2013, 04:25pm
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Open Ended Question ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
You should wait until after the game (or halftime) and ask your partner what he had on that play.
Good advice. If you really want to correct a mistake while the game is going on, a good question to ask him would be, "Did you get a good look at that?" It's more of an open ended type question that lacks any specific details, and is less critical. If he answers, "Yes", then just move on, and maybe bring it up at halftime, or after the game. If he says, "No", or, "What did you have?", then give him the specifics and let him make the call, and live, or die, with it.
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