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Arizona vs Colorado Head Coach T (Possible Ejection?) (Video)
Yay or nay? Maybe he "wanted to be tossed?"
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The latter half of that clip he is yelling at his players to "don't quit", so the first T looks fine, but an ejection would have been unnecessary.
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Unfortunately, ejections happen in situations like this because officials sometimes DO "quit officiating" and coaches do "lose it" when it does happen - or when they think it's happening. Based on what I saw, I'm not ejecting him here. He's a frustrated coach who is venting....he got one T - he made his point.... |
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In college those guys get away with murder so I don't know what is expected there. However in a high school game I'm tossing him.
He seems to be referencing the "foul" on the drive to the basket. I don't see a no call here as an official who has quit. |
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This was not even close to an ejection IMO unless there was some wording that was stated I was unaware of. Peace |
How long do we let a coach vent and turn this into a fiasco?
In this video he vents for nearly 30 seconds. He comes out on the floor and yells at lead. C whacks him. After the T he goes back to yelling at lead, then chases after C who was heading for the table... The contact that was passed on was clearly a no call. He didn't get beat by 20 because of this no call. It was all about him and nothing to do with the game. I agree in the current NCAA climate it is probably not an ejection... Not sure I agree with that. I think in a high school game it is an ejection... If it is not an ejection the officials should get 30 seconds on the floor berating him, pointing out his poor coaching, his marginal recruiting, his lack of preparedness, and all the mistakes his players made. For every ten seconds he can't take the officials berating is an extra game suspension |
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btw, this WAS a foul. Can the official get away w/out calling it? Sure. Can the coach feel that this foul should have been called and is evidence that the officials are "officiating the scoreboard"? Sure. Did the coach want/deserve a T? Yes. If an official is going to throw a coach out w/ 1:30 to go in a game that is already decided, then it needs to be so obvious that Ray Charles could "see" that the ejection was warranted. |
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The coach wanted to get a T, got the T, and continues to complain to make sure he gets his point across. That does NOT a fiasco make. One of the officials has GOT to get to him and talk to him - let him vent ("Coach, I understand you're upset. I'm right here...you don't have to yell. I hear what you're saying...nobody is quitting on this game. The Lead simply didn't think it was a foul...nothing more. Nothing less. Let's finish the game and not make this any worse than it is" (or something to that effect). Coaches in this situation will continue their rant until they feel that they're being heard - that's really all they want...to get their point across to the officials. The officials MUST be the calmest people in the arena. If they emotionally react to a situation like this, then they are not able to understand what is happening and understand how to handle/resolve it. One can certainly issue another T and pitch the coach....but I submit to you that it will cause more problems than it is worth (needless to say that an official who does this probably does not have the "people skills"/game management skills that other officials have who have advanced to higher basketball levels). In my experience, officials at higher levels talk more/first before issuing a T than officials at lower levels. I don't think that is an accident. |
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Then again, a coach at that level wouldn't do this unless he was looking to be tossed...and would be expecting it...that's a disportionate response to the play at hand. |
I'm getting his second at about the 25 second mark of the video.
He knows he was heard after he got the T. He got a few seconds to yell at the lead, then went back to the guy who gave him his T. That's when he gets the second. |
The coach was yelling "foul underneath, foul underneath". The slot properly T'd him up when he was on the court.
When the coach walked back onto the court and directed his arm action and his comment again to the L, on what was a correct no-call, I'm, as the L, tossing him. |
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I'd send a coach in a HS game for doing that. That's just too far over the top to "manage" away. And we have to answer to both our assigner and the state for ejections. There's plenty of accountability here.
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Yeah, this is a frustrated coach at the end of a frustrating 5-10 conference season. Perhaps his job is on the line. That's how this guy makes a living. So I'm sensitive to that.
No call? Probably. The coach was itching to find something to voice his opinion about before the game ended and I think he picked the wrong play. Kind of like when you're short stacked in poker, the blinds are getting bigger and bigger, and you have to decide the right hand to go all-in on; sometimes you don't have the cards you'd prefer, but you just go with it. So....putting all of this in context, combined with the fact that all he's really guilty of is coaching the officials to "not quit" (I don't think any magic words were used), I think the one technical here is fine. It was certainly needed and warranted. A second one? Nope. |
"Don't quit!"
Heh, this reminded me of Jim Valvano's ESPY speech, and his famous line, "Don't give up. Don't ever give up," which was famously misquoted by Emmitt Smith as, "Don't quit. Don't even quit.":D |
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The coach certainly does more than just "coaching the officials." The coach is out of his box and on the floor to start with. The coach gets whacked...then gives THREE overt gestures directly toward an official...two toward the new trail and one toward the slot who called the original T. Short of your bosses giving direction otherwise...this particular (IMO) ejection should be as easy as it comes. |
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"Here are X number of plays that should have been called fouls and weren't simply because the officials "quit" officiating the game. Then, when I get on them about their inexcusable behavior they throw me out because THEY'RE the ones not doing their job!! I should have gotten one T...but they threw me out because they knew they were wrong. The players don't deserve this and the PAC-12 shouldn't stand for this either". This exact scenario happens more often than you might think.... |
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Here's the perfect example of what I mean. HS game this year...after 2 visiting subs enter the game, the Lead official administers the ball before both players could leave the floor. The visiting coach gets the Trails attention to stop the game so the player can get off the floor...and in a normal tone tells the Lead: "Sir, can you please wait to administer the ball so that the players get properly get off the floor?"...TWEEEEET!!!!!...(you guessed it) - visiting coach gets a T. When brought to the assignors attention, who do you think he supported...the Lead (who was completely in the wrong) or the Coach who had a valid complaint? (My jaw practically hit the floor when I witnessed it). My point is, unless it's a rule that gets kicked (which happens to state final officials as well as rookies), officials rarely get in trouble w/ HS assignors. |
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Nowhere in our duties does it say we have to "baby" the coach. He is an adult. If he doesn't want to act like it, it's not our job to make him. You mention that a lot of the officials that advance are the ones that have great "people skills." Since when does calling a T mean an official isn't good with people. If you are so concerned about coddling coaches and not making them angry that you refuse to call a T, you are not going to get very far, either. I have assigners that would look at this video and would wholeheartedly support a second T. |
We're not here to decide whether the coach needs to stay or go....if he commits another unsporting offense after your partner whacked him then be a good partner and finish the job. And if the coach is asking for it or wants to get toss then oblige him. No need to make him sit and suffer, that shouldn't be an option.
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I'm just a little ole HS assignor and I would applaud my officials for sending that coach on his way. Too many assigners are more worried about keeping their job than doing their job...which doesn't mean always doing what's popular with the coaches. |
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And the example I was thinking of involved a coach who was 10 feet out on the floor yelling at an official. Nobody T'd him up. Somebody from the state commissioner's office was in the stands and the next day, the two officials who had been offered tournament assignments had them rescinded.
It's completely the opposite of his insinuation that officials can eject people without consequence, but it falls under "the last time I heard of an official losing games/being removed from a conference for on-court decisions/judgement." |
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