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I can't speak for others in my association, but I absolutely hate it. What since does it make for a lead to call a foul going the other way, report it, then have to run all the way down the court and become the new lead? It makes no sense to me. I know many others around my area feel the same way.
However, at most varsity level games I've seen so far, the officials do use the "new switch", probably because they are afraid of getting post season taken away if they don't. As far as non-varsity and below, some do, some don't. I'm easygoing, I let my partner dictate most of the time. If he wants to long switch on fouls going the other way, we will. If he doesn't, that's fine with me |
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We did the long switch last year until too many officials complained that no one knew how to do it. We had meetings and power points and multiple officials trying to describe how they thought it worked; all for naught. Our state director of officials person sent out an email mid-season saying we could do it either way.
After no communication prior to the season if we were gonna try it again or abandon the long switch entirely we got an email last week: the long switch is back on. |
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Killed The Goose That Layed The Golden Egg ...
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Sounds simple. Right? Wrong. We had guys "no long switching" on player control fouls (charges), and on rebounding fouls. Some officials were lazy, and others just didn't get it. Now we (again) switch on every single foul, that's right, every single foul; long switches, short switches, medium switches, big, and tall switches, shooting fouls, nonshooting fouls, shoot the breeze fouls, shoot the messenger fouls, they shoot horses, don't they, fouls, etc. You name it, we switch it.
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"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) Last edited by BillyMac; Wed Dec 24, 2014 at 07:07am. |
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I assume we're talking about 3-person only here since it was the only thing that changed last year.
I looked at the manual for 2013-2014, but I couldn't figure it out for sure: Was the new switch last year only for when the Lead calls a foul that causes a change of posession? (PC foul, illegal screen, rebounding foul) I'm pretty sure you never switch in the frontcourt going to the backcourt when the Center or Trail call a foul (Illegal screen for example), or in transition going backcourt to frontcourt (Hand check by the pressing team) when the Center or Trail call a foul. Do I have that right? |
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Washington State put out a notice that we are no longer doing the long switch. Here is what we got from the State:
"V-Back Mechanic - The change in the NFHS reporting mechanic caused a lot of confusion last year. As agreed upon at the WOA Conference, the WOA will be reverting to the V-Back mechanic: On ANY foul that results in a backcourt throw in for the offended team, the calling official will report foul, V-back to the calling position and then officials will move as if an out of bounds had been called." |
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Trying to Make Some Sense of It All (Steely Dan)
Not that I care one way or the other, but what seems various state and local entities have advised their members differently. The crux seems to be this:
What is to be done when "a foul is called and the ball is going from backcourt to frontcourt with no free throws." What is not defined clearly is "what kind of foul", for example: after a TC foul by team A in its frontcourt? or after a defensive foul by team A with no bonus in team B's backcourt? The state of Indiana serves as a good example (I don't live there). It sent out six or eight video examples last year which all simulated team A fouling team B in B's backcourt after B's throw-in. On the other hand, the clarification they sent out last week or so from the NFHS (via Referee magazine) showed a six-panel illustration of various plays, all team control fouls by team A in its frontcourt after which team B would have a throw-in in it's backcourt. I'm not saying I'm for or against it. Just that those who adopted "it" all seem to be complying with "it" in different ways. Or is it not "either/or", rather "both/and"? (Clowns to the left of me, Jokers to the right; Here I am, Stuck in the Middle...)
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Making Every Effort to Be in the Right Place at the Right Time, Looking at the Right Thing to Make the Right Call Last edited by Freddy; Wed Dec 24, 2014 at 12:47pm. |
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