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 The other thing is the violation isn't called in half the high school games I watch. Might as well just make the change. | 
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 And I call this violation, but I seem like the only one that does. The rule was stupid to begin with. Why are we worried about this and act like the game is so rough in this area? All it does is cause other issues IMO. Peace | 
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 And I don't see how the likelihood of a lane violation changes if you change the rule. Players are going to try to cheat in no matter when you release the players along the lane. | 
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 And I do not see the game as needing a shot clock. For one most teams do not slow down the game that much. And if you put in a shot clock, teams will rush their offense. Remember these are HS kids, not a bunch of kids recruited to run a particular offense. I am sure it works in some places, but I am not worried about everyone having a problem, I am worried about the right problem at the wrong time, in the wrong situation. And it will happen if you have a shot clock. If I did not go places in college and see a bunch of mistakes that we have to constantly correct, I would not be so skeptical. And those mistakes happen with D1 officials working games. Now I want a guy that does not know the difference between POI and AP and they are going to catch a shot clock mistake. Peace | 
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 Adam-you're right.all of the schools in our league have at least 1 adult at the table.Half the league employs all adults at the table.At my school the AD runs our shot clock,a vice principal of academics runs the game clock,and I handle the book.If anybody has to miss a game we have several backup personnel ready with given notice.If we can do it and have no drop off then every school can do it. | 
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 2. My main question is why? AFAIC, it's a solution in search of a problem. For the 1 or two games per season we hear about that end up 15-7 because of stall-ball (nationwide)? I just don't see it as worth the expense. That said, if the states want to adopt it, I have no problem with opening it up that way: allow the state adoption to include the SC. I'd just be against it in my state, and against a mandatory use at the NFHS level (probably at least 10 years away). | 
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 Players going in on the "release" has been tried, not just in a few states as an "experiment", but, rather, as a national rule change, and, at least according to the NFHS, it didn't work. If I can recall the rationale regarding why we changed the last time, it was because there was too much contact, illegal, and otherwise, when players entered on the "release". You guys are all certainly entitled to your various opinions, but the NFHS had empirical evidence that caused them to go back to the "hit". I'm sure that Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. will be moseying along in a while, if he can drag himself off the baseball, or softball, field, to give us some of the history regarding these rule changes. | 
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 Billy is correct in his dates. The NFHS and NCAA Men's changed from "hit" to "release" in 1981. The NFHS and NCAA Men's Committees said the change was made because officials were not enforcing the rule as written. When the NCAA Women's Committee was created in the late 1980's it adopted the NCAA Men's "release" rule. When the NFHS change back to "hit" in 1993, the reason was due excessive contact during rebounding action. BUT, one can go back through all of the NFHS and NCAA Men's/Women's POEs for the last 20 years and one will see that illegal contact has been a concern more often than not and the Rules Committees POEs would seem that the Committees want officials to call more fouls. MTD, Sr. | 
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