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I went to my first camp (high school teams) a few weeks ago and had a great time. I learned alot and recieved good feedback on my performance. I did have one "yes, but" moment with my evaluators. He told us that we should know how many fouls the best players on the team have so we can make sure they "earn" their last foul. I understood where he was coming from as far as making the game go on without everyone in the gym raking you over the coals, but I've had other officals tell me not to look at player fouls in the scorebook (unless there's a problem with the scorers table). As I said, I understood where he was coming from, and after reading about "camp manners" on the forum I kept my mouth shut and nodded, but what does everyone else think about this? Thanks.
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That's a sticky point. I do not agree that an official has any duty to know that Team A's stud has 4 fouls, but I do agree that a seasoned official is able to keep up with these things mentally as the game progresses. This is where Game Management comes into play, and can't be "taught" at the camp level.
If you start worrying about how many fouls #3 has, this WILL detract from your concentration level.....However, as an official gains experience, these things tend to become more natural. |
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I do not believe this clinician was telling you to actually look in the book, he is telling you to be aware of that situation. The way that happens is with experience and working a lot of games. When you start looking to do varsity games, it is to your benefit to know who the "stars" or "key players" are. Because what they do or what happens to them will affect what the coaches say and how they act towards you. Usually you will be very aware of who those players are, just by what they are trying to do on the court or who gets the ball as well. But at the earlier stages of your career this can be difficult to do. So unless you have a lot of experience and are doing varsity games all the time, this is not going to be much of your concern. But it is something you can work on as you move up the latter.
Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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You are going to hear from both sides on this topic. Some people share the same opinion of your clinician. Identify the "star" players and if they get close to fouling out, or get a few fouls early , make sure that any fouls you call on them are "earned".
As far as I'm concerned, HS is not the NBA! Officials should strive for consistancy. Contact that warrants a players first foul, warrants the same players fifth foul. This applies whether the player is the star or the last player off the bench. The common wisdom spouted for the clinicians point of view is "you don't want to affect the game by fouling out the star unless it's a "solid" foul". I say that if team B knows that star A has four fouls, they may try to run plays at him to try to get that fifth foul. If you are passing on contact by star A that you called earlier in the game, aren't you affecting the game by denying team B the chance to do what they are attempting? Bottom line - work to become consistant, call the game. PS - Good job with the "camp manners"!
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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Andy, AMEN!
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All of your work, all your clinics, all your reading, and all your other efforts to improve yourself as an official, help you to become consistent. Why introduce something to mess that up? Please, don't do it. |
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Church Basketball "The brawl that begins with a prayer" |
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Thanks for the replies! Everyone makes good points to think about. I agree that it's kind of a game management type skill to consider. I would not look at the score book and I don't really think that's what the clinician was telling us. I guess the best way to stay out of trouble is call things consistantly and be sure about your calls. One of my personal points of emphasis going into camp and going into next season is to concentrate on being sure of what I call and laying off some of the ticky tack stuff. As a newer official I find myself blowing the whistle and then second guessing myself immediately. If I'm second guessing myself, coaches and Joe Blow parent are going to be on their third or fourth guess. Anyway, all camp did was get me excited about next season already. From some of the comments I heard I think I might get a few varsity games next season and after working varsity in the camp I can't wait! The better the players, the more fun it is to call.
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But this is just one person's opinion. But the higher you go up or the better the game at the high school level, you need to be prepared for all the obsticals that will be thrown at you. This is just one way to overcome them. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Things you should know at any point in the game:
- score of the game - time left in the game - time left on shot clock - direction of alternating possession arrow - number of timeouts each team has left - number of team fouls each team has - number of fouls on each starter - if a coach has been warned - where to go if you're hungy/thirsty after the game
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9-11-01 http://www.fallenheroesfund.org/fallenheroes/index.php http://www.carydufour.com/marinemoms...llowribbon.jpg |
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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