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Oak Hill (VA) vs St. Joseph (OH) (Video)
Two video clips please:
1. Action following the basket with 5:18 left in the 3rd quarter. Delay of game violation? Intentional Personal foul? Nothing (NCAA)? 2. Live ball, contact foul during rebounding action called a T by the new Trail with 3:42 remaining in the 3rd quarter. |
And yes, Oak Hill wore gray uniforms and #3 wore a gold arm sleeve and gold headband.
I've noticed through the years that the officials who work these televised HS showcases don't enforce the uniform rules. |
I post one clip from this showcase and Nevada wants clips from all these games. ;)
First play: <iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/pIIc8K4B7Io" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Second play: <iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/BeF6kKpXgeU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
Yes, I'm still here...
On #1: I'm thinking that's just them getting tangled up. Grey took the shot then White - who was trailing behind - ran up his rear end trying to get the ball in play quickly. They seemed to sort it out well enough on their own.
On #2: I remember getting the RCA dog look on my face when I saw it live. I was hoping his partners might have reminded him it was live-ball contact. |
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Play #1: Looks just like players got tangled up. I would have just stopped play to stop all that action to prevent to have to call anything else like a T or something that by rule would apply on a throw-in.
Play #2: It never can be a T for this. It could be an intentional or flagrant, but not a T. Ball was live. Peace |
Sit#1: "delay of game". gray intentionally interferred with white attempting to inbound the ball after a made basket; this is a commonly applied ruse that players use to thwart/delay the opponents initiation of the fast break action.
Sit#2: holding foul on gray; I will concede that a body on the floor would give an Official a "moment of pause" on whether to penalize the action further; however, a dramatic-appearing fall is not sufficient enough reason to apply anything other than a common foul. |
Play 1 - nothing. White has the whole endline and went right into black. Play on.
Play 2 - common foul. |
Play 1: Did the shot not go through the basket? It seems that W1 never did step out-of-bounds, to make the subsequent throw-in.
Play2: It looks like the infraction was effected by the left elbow of the Gray player, and thus the Lead may have confused his options regarding a foul call. |
Mechanics question on the 2nd play:
The lead rotates over as the ball moves to the other side and it seems the C stays put. Is that a correct mechanic since the player goes up for the shot soon after the lead finishes rotating? |
NCAAM Rules
A point of clarification - I know a number of refs that officiate these games on MLK weekend at the Naismith HoF. They are assigned by college assignors and are following NCAAM rules.
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Play 1: Normally if the scoring team momentarily touches the ball or maybe even sets it on the floor, I'm not going to issue a DOG if there's no (dare I say it) adv/disad. However, in this case, white touches the ball first and it clearly interferes with gray's ability to inbound, regardless of whether white intended to do this, and regardless of whether gray could run the endline or not. So I have a DOG warning here. This warning also precludes any possible foul because it causes the ball to remain dead before gray has disposal.
Play 2: Hard to tell what the new L (new T) saw, so if he saw intentional or flagrant contact, I'm not going to question him. But penalizing by "T" is probably incorrect unless the foul was non-contact in nature. But it sure looked like contact was the culprit here. Assuming it was, hopefully the crew got together and determined the correct penalty. |
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No Idea
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2. I was making a clarification based on the OP question #1. |
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