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Do you have a suggestion as to what else we might do, both within the current rules and with any proposed rules change? |
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Case Play: SITUATION A: Team A scores. As the official begins a five-second count the official glances at the running clock which reads 6.5 seconds. Team B commits a five second count violation. The official blows the whistle and looks at the clock which reads 1.8 seconds. A timing error is suspected. RULING: After conferring with the timer and your partners, it is determined that: a) the clock was prematurely stopped or had malfunctioned. b) the clock had not malfunctioned and was not stopped until the official's whistle for the 5-second violation. In a), use the procedure in rule 5.10.2 to correct the clock to 1.5 seconds. In b), make no change to the clock. |
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I'm not using my count to make the change or a fraction of a second in either direction. Accuracy across 5 or 10 seconds is just not high enough to correct such small differences.
If after starting a count at 5.3, someone gets to 5 and the clock still shows 1.6, one of a few things happened: the count was fast, the official observed the wrong time, the clock started late, or the clock stopped early. If the clock was already running, it can't be that the clock started late. It is very unlikely that clock stopped early. It happens but 99% of the clock errors deal with the starting of the clock or not stopping it in time. So, that leaves us with two most probable options that are both mistakes by the official. Regardless of the difference in the count vs what came off the clocks, if you don't know that it was not running at a time when it should have been, I don't think you can say that it is an obvious timing mistake when the difference is on the order of 1 second.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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I thought it was a given in the OP that the clock stopped early. If not, I agree with you. And, I had the clock start early (when a missed FT hit the floor, and not when the ball was touched) this week. The ball was then immediately batted out of bounds. I saw the clock start early, saw the time when the ball was touched, and saw the time when the ball hit OOB. I took .5 off the time when the FT was shot, reset the clock, and off we went. Were my observations correct? I think so. WOuld someone else have observed something different? Possibly. (And, it all happened with < 10 seconds to go in the quarter). |
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I suppose it could be read that way. I read to to say that when he got to 5 and called it, he looked up ans it was stopped at 1.6, which didn't make sense.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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I find it interesting that Case Book 5.10.1 SITUATION B states:". . . There is no provision for the correction of an error made in the official's accuracy in counting seconds."
. . .Kinda makes all our machinations on the subject moot, don't ya think? . . .
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To be good at a sport, one must be smart enough to play the game -- and dumb enough to think that it's important . . .
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That is covering the case where an official calls a count-based infraction too soon or too late, such as calling a 10 second count after either 8 or 12 seconds have properly elapsed on the clock. The case play is saying that the violation stands regardless of information that indicates that the count is inaccurate. It is silent about changing the clock to match the official's count when there is no evidence that the clock was started/stopped incorrectly aside from it being different than the officials count.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association Last edited by Camron Rust; Tue Feb 24, 2015 at 02:46am. |
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The rules allow for some "human" discrepancy from when the official blows the clock dead to when it ACTUALLY stopped. For most of us it a few tenths to maybe even a half a second. In the second instance the timer said they stopped it when they heard the whistle and that accounts for a .3 second differential. We can live with that. IF the time says they stopped it before then we change it. You are not going to see a 1 second lag in this instance. In my experience it's about .1-.3. Your pseudo gibberish science and logic does not work here. It will not work in any game I work, and it makes no sense. You can try and confuse things but it doesn't work.
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in OS I trust |
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If you're going to jump someone's case, you should at least be right.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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