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At the middle school level I would toss a coach that rolled the rule book out.
Maybe at the Varsity level I would only give 1 T, and then if he kept going on I would issue #2 (maybe I would toss, I don't know what I would honestly do). But coaches know better than to act that way at the V level. It's no different then during most games I go up in the rafters and tear down the "sportsmanship" banner that a lot of schools have on how fans, players and coaches are expected to act. Then I would wrap him in it and pull the end really fast so the coach becomes a top spinning all the way to the locker room. But I digress, errors by officials are magnified way more than errors by players or coaches. If you break a game down I am pretty sure officials err way less than either players or coaches, and absolutely less than if you combine those 2 groups.
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No one is saying coaches & players don't make mistakes. We've made plenty. Refs are trying their hardest. I know I couldn't do it. Not yet anyway. Missing FTs, not boxing out, horrible Defense, etc. The refs didn't lose the game for us. We should have executed better. Again, I'm only here to get clarification, not bash. I have friends that are refs. Last edited by Knights_Coach; Thu Jan 29, 2015 at 02:53pm. |
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Don't think you are here to bash but the fact remains, the only T if you busted the rule book out at that spot would have been on you. In the end the lack of knowledge or skill on an official's part applies to both teams equally. It may just appear that you got the short end of the stick, but the size of the stick is relative.
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In Missouri you can "Show Me"
1. Protest Procedure (MSHSAA Board Policy): The Board of Directors adopted the following policy, March 1997,
to address protests. The Board acknowledges that mistakes are made by officials in judgment and even sometimes in misapplication of game rules. However, the decisions rendered by officials at the contest site are to be final and any further process other than the one outlined below would not truly serve a useful purpose in the overall scope of high school athletics. a. Within the procedures established within each individual sport rule code, the head coach must request a review of an official’s application of a rule through appropriate channels. b. If, after the review is complete, the coach still believes there has been a misapplication of a rule by a contest official(s), the coach shall then file a formal verbal protest with the game officials who will then notify the opposing coach immediately of the protest. A coach shall not protest a decision of judgment. c. Following this notification of protest, the head coach shall be allowed approximately ten minutes to use his/her National Federation Rules Book, National Federation Case Book, MSHSAA Rules Meeting Announcements and/or MSHSAA Sport Manual to locate and show the game official(s) the appropriate rule reference which clarifies a misapplication of the game rule. If the head coach does not have personal copies of the above mentioned materials at the game site or the specific rule reference(s) or case book play(s) cannot be located within the maximum allowable ten minutes, the protest shall automatically be disallowed and the game shall continue from the point of interruption. If a rule reference(s) or case book play(s) is found that indicates a misapplication of a rule has occurred, the official’s decision shall be corrected at that time before any further action occurs, and the contest shall be resumed from the point of interruption after the correction as provided in the contest rules. When appropriate, the game officials may assist the head coach in locating appropriate rule and case book references. d. All protests shall be resolved at the contest site before any further game action occurs. e. Protests that are not filed in a timely manner by that sport rule code shall be automatically disallowed. f. The MSHSAA Board of Directors and/or staff shall not review contest protests. 2. Application of Protest Procedure a. Introduction: Protests rarely occur and the new protest procedure policy is not intended to increase the frequency of protests. It is however, intended to resolve the protest on site. For this to occur the following must take place: i. Coaches and officials must be professional with each other. This should be a non-confrontational conference. ii. As stated above, protests involve application of rules only – not judgment calls. (Examples of items which could be protested: Football – penalizing 5 yards instead of 15 yards; Wrestling – allowing one minute for injury time instead of two minutes; Softball – allowing only two charged defensive conferences instead of three.) (Examples of items which could not be protested: Football – pass interference; Wrestling – stalling; Softball – out or safe calls.) iii. Get It Right! If the official has made a mistake – admit it, correct it and move on. Contest officials and the head coach filing the official protest shall notify the MSHSAA Office in writing of any contest in which an official protest has occurred and the resolution of that protest. The MSHSAA Special Report Forms shall be used for this purpose. b. Process i. Once a head coach has filed a formal verbal protest with the game officials, they shall then notify the opposing head coach of the protest and the playing field, court, mat, etc. shall be cleared of all participants and they shall report to their respective team bench areas. ii. The head coach shall then be allowed approximately ten minutes to locate specific rule references from the NFHS Rules Book, NFHS Case Book, MSHSAA Rules Meeting Announcements and/or MSHSAA Sport Manual to substantiate the claim that a misapplication of a game rule has occurred. The game officials shall also confer among themselves during the period to address the claim of the coach as to the potential rule misapplication. iii. If the head coach is able to produce rule evidence from the above mentioned sources to support the claim of a misapplication of a game rule, the officials shall correct the error as provided in the contest rules and the contest shall proceed from the point of interruption. If the head coach cannot produce the evidence, the protest shall be disallowed and the contest shall continue from the point of interruption. The previously mentioned materials must be immediately available for review at the playing field sideline, courtside, mat side, etc. (Time shall not be provided to go to a locker room, team bus, coach’s office, etc.) 3. Once the final decision regarding the protest has been rendered, the game officials shall provide the participants sufficient opp |
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The moment you pull it out on the court to show an official, YOU are saying exactly that.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Who's saying that I or anyone is saying the ref didn't know what he was saying? I know they know more than I do as far as the rules go. Knowing what I know now, I wouldn't but it would have been just for clarification purposes just like how I confided and some other refs after my game. I just want a better understanding. This is not a hot dog swinging contest. In my example, it was tied w/ seconds left. The other team had 0 TOs but still called TO, it wasn't granted. The tech would have allowed us to hit or miss our FTs but we would have gotten the ball. Let the game end in the teams' hands not at the hands of the refs. I like what Missouri does. I'm not saying their protest procedure is perfect. I'm doing my research and I called them and left a voice mail. Again, no one is trying to undermine the ref but sometimes like in my case it's too late. The team we lost to in OT by 1, won it all last night by 3. UPDATE: This is an e-mail I received that was sent to ALL the refs in my district. I just happen to be friends w/ some and they shared it w/ me. I left out the e-mail address & name for obvious reasons. On Jan 29, 2015 4:26 PM, A coach or a player can call time-outs in excess of the allotted number. It may be requested and shall be granted at the expense of a technical foul, even if you have told both teams that they were out of time-outs. Rule 5 Section 11 Art. 6. Thanks B***** |
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It's all about the kids. Little Johnny, Billy, Charlie, and The Fonz get the short end of the stick every time. The humanity, the inhumane treatment of the youth, the, the....you get it.
It's for the kids.
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in OS I trust |
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Smitty, you're right. Time to let it go. Time heals all wounds. I think I was the one looking for sympathy. I'd just like to say thanks to everyone, again for the great conversation.
Deecee, you're absolutely right. It's for the kids. If no one is there to fight for them. Who will? We licked our wounds and we are already planning for the next season. I've learned so much about the game and myself. And I have A WHOLE LOT more to learn about the game. Gentlemen, if I've offended any I do apologize. So long and have a great weekend. |
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