Camron Rust |
Fri Apr 11, 2014 11:11pm |
Quote:
Originally Posted by MechanicGuy
(Post 931492)
The literature may be clear, but allowing for (or even requiring) two opposite fouls/calls for the same contact is patently absurd.
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The fundamental principle is that neither official is permitted to overrule another official. Same contact, two judgement, apply both rulings. That is really the only fair result. Any discussion had is going to one official's opinion overriding the other no matter how you phrase the resolution.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MechanicGuy
(Post 931492)
Disagreements, even opposing signals, happen often during a game, but this is really the only situation where the officials are unable to come together and decide the proper call.
If a ball is tipped out of bounds on the sideline in transition and the L points one way while the T points the other, does that automatically make it a jump ball or should the two come together and see who had the best look/is most confident in their call?
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Apples and oranges.....that is a matter of who saw what and when, not two opinions of who was at fault for a single contact.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MechanicGuy
(Post 931492)
I suppose the most important lesson to learn from all of this is to hold your preliminary signal, especially is the contact occurs out of your PCA....or closer to another officials' PCA.
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As I've said many times before, that is good on paper, but has holes in it in practice. There are several locations that are on the boundary of both officials primaries and the players may be moving directly along that boundary. Now what?
Quote:
Originally Posted by OKREF
(Post 931511)
So, if two conflicting signals means that you must report both, then what happens when one signals a travel and one signals a foul? Are we reporting the foul?
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Two events, one happened first. Figure out which. Neither official is wrong, just that the first action caused the ball to become dead making the 2nd action moot by rule.
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