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Stuff coaches say
Didn't really fit in the meme thread but this happened Sunday.
Team B has a player injured on offense. Team A grabs the rebound and starts to fast break the other way. I run down as Lead tableside. Team A stops their break and pulls the ball outside the 3 point line. I blow play dead. Coach A: "You can't do that!" Me: "I can and I just did." Coach A: "You're wrong." Me: "Coach, player safety is m-" Coach A: "YOU'RE WRONG" as he walks away. |
Obviously I don't know what tone you used but "I can and I just did" sounds too confrontational.
How about: "Coach, when your team stops trying to score I'm supposed to blow the play dead." It's a few more words but in one sentence you let him know why the whistle blew and - indirectly - that there's a rule-related reason for it. If he complains after that it's on him. |
Seven Words
"I'd do the same for your team, coach."
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I also might have ignored it in summer ball. High school ball, the coaches around here don't bitch about this kind of stuff. |
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6 words :D |
Summer?
I'd probably just smile and walk away. I'll get a chance Sunday. I'm working games 3-6 of my summer. Disney money. |
Good on the spot decision to "kill the play".
No one is out there being paid to be at the gym but you. It is your responsibility to monitor such activity. In this day and age when everything is videotaped [and your game may have been being recorded on a cell phone as mine usually are by fans instands], then as an Independent Contractor (read as: hoops ref) they [the injured kid's parents] could hold you liable if that injured kid started convulsing and you just let a game continue on without giving a chance for medical or helpful assistance. |
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It probably didn't help that when I blew the play dead the injured player had stood up and the coach's team had started to run a pick and roll to exploit the man down. It was three person and I should have let my C or T take care of it cuz they were closer to the injury. Thankfully the coach didn't say anything else to me the rest of the game. |
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MTD, Jr., and I are officiating (two-man crew) a boys' H.S. summer camp in June with multiple sites being utilized. We are officiating a varsity level game between a team from NE Ohio (Visiting Team) and the team (Home Team) whose site where this particular game is being played. I am T on the Table Side when a scramble for a loose ball develops in front of me. V-1 dives for the ball but dives late because when his forehead smacks the hardwood floor H-1 is twenty feet into his team's frontcourt with an uncontested layup in front of him. V-1's immediate reaction to hitting the floor with his head was to grab his head and curl into a ball. I blew the ball dead immediately. H-HC complains that I can't stop the game when his player has an uncontested layup in front of him. I told him yes I can because the player had a head injury. His response: "No you can't." :eek: Did I tell you all that this was just a summer team camp with nothing at stake. Sometimes coaches brains are located in the South end of a North bound donkey. MTD, Sr. |
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He said they had pulled the ball back out behind the 3 point line before he blew it dead...and he said the player went down before the breaking team rebounded the ball. |
It amazes me when seemingly trained officials act like we can't see what's happening elsewhere because it's not in our "primary."
Sometimes, the only person that can see the injured player is the person looking in that direction, even if it's just in the periphery. I have no problem with what the OP did. It met the spirit and letter of the rule. And maybe the T/C didn't see it. Maybe they did. So what? |
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Let's Go To The Videotape ...
5-8-2-A: Time-out occurs and the clock, if running, shall be stopped when an official ... Stops play ... Because of an injury as in 3-3-6, 7.
NOTE: When a player is injured as in Art. 2(a), the official may suspend play after the ball is dead or is in control of the injured player’s team or when the opponents complete a play. A play is completed when a team loses control (including throwing for goal) or withholds the ball from play by ceasing to attempt to score or advance the ball to a scoring position. When necessary to protect an injured player, the official may immediately suspend play. |
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