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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Mon Oct 28, 2013, 02:40am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
You could have approached your partner in the nicest way, that still does not give you the right to come to your partner and question their judgment by coming to them in your situation.

Peace
JRutledge, please read my posts more carefully as the rhetorical questions you're asking are all judgment plays (traveling - judging whether the dribble started before picking up the pivot foot; closely guarded - whether the defender was within six feet and actively guarding the opponent; 10 seconds - on the referee who's counting; held ball - simultaneous possession with no one gaining sole possession after a tug). I purposefully bolded the word "rule" for a reason.

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.

Last edited by Afrosheen; Mon Oct 28, 2013 at 03:03am.
  #2 (permalink)  
Old Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:02am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
JRutledge, please read my posts more carefully as the rhetorical questions you're asking are all judgment plays (traveling - judging whether the dribble started before picking up the pivot foot; closely guarded - whether the defender was within six feet and actively guarding the opponent; 10 seconds - on the referee who's counting; held ball - simultaneous possession with no one gaining sole possession after a tug). I purposefully bolded the word "rule" for a reason.
All those things can be incorrectly called because of the understanding or lack of understanding of the rules involved. And you just said something that shows either a lack of understanding of a rule or not knowing the rule on closely guarded.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
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; 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; awarding a basket on a field goal try with less than three tenths of a second remaining.
A backcourt violation involves both judgment as well as rules knowledge to make properly. That is no different then those other rules I referenced. And you even said something that is not part of the rule for closely guarded that could affect the judgment for making that call.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
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. He turns around to the table and indicates to the table to score the basket. What are you going to do?
That would depend, is the ball in my primary? Do I have the last second shot responsibility? Do I have a good look at the play?

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:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
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.
I have told you how. And I would also add that not every call needs to have a conference when the only thing you are doing is asking questions. And some calls are much more acceptable to conference on, but those usually involve things like an out of bounds where it is very possible the ball is coming from different areas on the court and a partner can see who last touched it. Even then you do not ask a question, you tell your partner what you saw and let them decide if your information helps them make a call. And I am not criticizing you just to criticize you. If you have not noticed I was responding to Coach Bill's position on professionalism. You came in later to defend your original point, which I was not even being critical of again. You responded to me as if my comments to Bill was about you. That is fine, but I honestly have stated my opinion on this issue some time ago. You keep wanting to get validation that you were right. I guess that is fine, but there is a time and a place and your OP, that was not the time or the place.

Peace
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Last edited by JRutledge; Mon Oct 28, 2013 at 03:14am.
  #3 (permalink)  
Old Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:11am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge View Post
That would depend, is the ball in my primary? Do I have the last second shot responsibility? Do I have a good look at the play?

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.

Peace
"No" on all counts. And how does the "last shot" all of a sudden grant you to change up the "mechanics" as you described to Coach Bill. Either you're principled and consistent or you're just making stuff up now to maintain the belief that I was wrong. And it seems to be you keep dodging my question. What are you going to do when your partner kicks a rule? I'm also getting the sense that you're now at least willing to consider to confer with your partner now that it is a "last shot" situation, which means all of a sudden you're now willing to throw away all of your criticisms of me of being "out of position" or "questioning my partner" out the window. What is it about the "last shot" that you're now being inconsistent? What did you just do that created this inconsistency. I'll give you a hit, it starts with a "j" and ends with "udge."
  #4 (permalink)  
Old Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:40am
Do not give a damn!!
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: On the border
Posts: 30,555
Quote:
Originally Posted by Afrosheen View Post
"No" on all counts. And how does the "last shot" all of a sudden grant you to change up the "mechanics" as you described to Coach Bill. Either you're principled and consistent or you're just making stuff up now to maintain the belief that I was wrong. And it seems to be you keep dodging my question. What are you going to do when your partner kicks a rule? I'm also getting the sense that you're now at least willing to consider to confer with your partner now that it is a "last shot" situation, which means all of a sudden you're now willing to throw away all of your criticisms of me of being "out of position" or "questioning my partner" out the window. What is it about the "last shot" that you're now being inconsistent? What did you just do that created this inconsistency. I'll give you a hit, it starts with a "j" and ends with "udge."
I guess you do not know that continuous motion is not only rules based and a judgment call. It is such a judgment call that many officials improperly do not award baskets or shots properly on fouls because they might lack knowledge of the rule or their judgment. And the last time I checked officials do not tell other officials what to do when it comes to that rule. All you can do properly is tell your partner, "The ball went in the basket" or in some situations, "He passed the ball off." Other then that if they insist that a ball handler was not shooting and the foul was "On the floor" there is not much a partner can do. I guess you could sit there and argue on the floor they are wrong and get into a confrontation as you did with your partner (as you did not give any information), so be it. I cannot speak for anyone else, but I have not gotten in any confrontations with partners on the floor for these kinds of situations. On the other hand, you have had such confrontation and made your partner so mad they confronted you in email. That also has never happen to me in my career. So how is that attitude working out for you?

Peace
__________________
Let us get into "Good Trouble."
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Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010)

Last edited by JRutledge; Mon Oct 28, 2013 at 03:43am.
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