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Don't feel bad. A 15 year veteran official owes me 40 bucks that I'll never see. 20 because he thought long sleeve undershirts were illegal and 20 because he thought when the defense violated first on a free throw a violation by the shooter was ignored.
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I swear, Gus, you'd argue with a possum. It'd be easier than arguing with you, Woodrow. Lonesome Dove |
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I guess that wasn't you I saw last month. I took a drive to a different part of the state to see a game, and saw a defender crashed into while stationary and having LGP under the backboard. The old-timer called a block.
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Confidence is a vehicle, not a destination. |
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How much of this is really that all of the myths re: block charge (whether invented or adaptations to an old rule) result in the charge not being called.
- Defender has to be stationary. - Defener cannot be moving. - Defender can't be too deep. You never hear myths esposing making it easier to draw charges. The reality is that most players, coaches and a lot of officals whether just using rules or applying myths feel like the number of conditions that have to be met in order for it to be a charge simply mean most plays aren't charges. Therefore they want/expect all close plays to the naked eye to go to the offense. ON the flip side: I work with a lot of guys who no call a lot more than I am comfortable no calling but when in Rome. THat being said I feel like crews I work on (myself included) tend to be more often sure that we know its a block than being sure we know its a charge. So when I look back at tape to judge performance if forced to make a call in areas I let go/no called I would have more PC's or borderline PC's on my no calls then I would blocks.
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Coach: Hey ref I'll make sure you can get out of here right after the game! Me: Thanks, but why the big rush. Coach: Oh I thought you must have a big date . . .we're not the only ones your planning on F$%&ing tonite are we! |
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Very, very fw seem to have a clue on charges -- perhaps becuase defenders playing for a charge are few and far between at that point and they aren't watching for it . . . but if I had a nickel for every "block" that was more of a "failed to get out of the way of the out of control driver" . . . |
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Unless you can help train up-and-coming newbies... much easier to teach 'em the right way right away than try to break bad habits later.
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If I had a choice, CYO middle school ball would be one of my last choices to train anyone. They likely don't have a decent pool of officials in the first place, and in order to have the vast majority of that pool be competent, you'd have to pay them a decent amount of money. It's just not likely on all kinds of fronts.
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On the lemons-to-lemonaid side, it gives us the opportunity to teach the kids that they have to adapt to the officials and figure out what is a foul today without getting hung up on what it was last game . . . |
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What is there to gain from calling any game? I don't get this. Whatever the level, if you're available and you're asked, if you want to go, go, and if you don't, don't go.
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I swear, Gus, you'd argue with a possum. It'd be easier than arguing with you, Woodrow. Lonesome Dove |
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For an experienced official, a CYO Middle School game offers nothing that will make that official better in any faze of the game. I think you'd have to reach pretty far to say that this represents an opportunity to "see plays" and learn anything. There's very little structure as there is in school district middle school games. If you want to go work these games, knock yourself out.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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There is a reason we do not run a single high school camp at a middle school game or contest is involved. I will gladly pass if the goal is to train someone. I would have to be doing it for the easy money first and then training a distant 100 on the list of 100. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Closed Your Eyes And Went To Heaven ...
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Our assigner sits on the league board of directors. Coaches have to attend a mandatory new rules meeting at the start of each season. Officials are expected to show up in full uniform (no sweats, no sneakers). All Fashion Police rules are enforced. Assignments are made through Arbiter. Our assigner hosts (and pays for) a Holiday Pizza Party every year at a local pizza joint, all the pizza, and beer, you can eat, and drink. We used to have a preseason IAABO Refresher Exam study group until our "high school board" decided it was a great idea and copied it, and now it's mandatory that we go to one of the "high school board" Refresher Exam study groups. All our officials are "certified" IAABO officials. About 75% are high school varsity officials, the rest are junior varsity (subvarsity) officials. 25% of our forty Catholic middle school officials made the state public high school tournament list last year, and we've got a handful of college officials working these Catholic middle school games. Our assigner recruits only the best young officials to join our group, all young officials are vetted before they join us, they have to come highly recommended. Young officials don't apply, they have to be invited. Some relaxed mechanics. We don't switch on every foul, and don't always make it all the way to the reporting area. Lead will occasionally inbound with a bounce pass across the lane to avoid the trail moving across the court. Veterans are expected to offer constructive criticism to the younger guys, and gals, and help them move up the public high school officiating ladder. "Varsity" (eighth grade, seven minute periods) double header (a boys game, and a girls game): $86.00. "Subvarsity" (below eighth grade, six minute periods) doubleheaders, or tripleheaders: $30.00 per game.
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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) “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” (Matthew 25:36) Last edited by BillyMac; Mon Jan 05, 2015 at 07:22pm. |
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Who You Gonna Call ???
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![]() That's why we have "The List": A defensive player does not have to remain stationary to take a charge. A defender may turn away or duck to absorb contact, provided he or she has already established legal guarding position, which is both feet on the playing court and facing the opponent. The defender can always move backwards or sideways to maintain a legal guarding position and may even have one or both feet off the floor when contact occurs. That player may legally rise vertically. If the defender is moving forward, then the contact is caused by the defender, which is a blocking foul.
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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) “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” (Matthew 25:36) Last edited by BillyMac; Mon Jan 05, 2015 at 07:23pm. |
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