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Live and die with the ECO?
An inexperienced official is working his first varsity game. A pass to his sideline falls incomplete. The official fails to signal incomplete.
Do you want the ECO to stop the clock without a signal? Do you want the ECO to continue to let the clock run?
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"...as cool as the other side of the pillow." - Stuart Scott "You should never be proud of doing the right thing." - Dean Smith |
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Regardless of who happens to be working the sideline, when a forward pass. legal or illegal, hits the ground, the clock stops.
Depending on the norm for your area, there may be instances and situations whereby the Referee wants to move the clock along, after having advised both teams of his intentions, and you would follow his signals, even when they appear to contradict normal ptotocol. Incomplete forward passes hitting the ground is NOT one of those circumstances. |
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Most definitely stop the clock. The ECO knowing ahead of time who the newbies are will help keep the rules followed.
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Pope Francis |
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I certainly wouldn't want to shock or surprise anyone, but not all Referees choose to do things exactly alike.
Perhaps, that's why it's always a good idea to involve the ECO in as much of the pre-game discussion as possible. At the very least it's a good idea for the Referee to review signals and procedures with each ECO, so everyone is on the same page and there's less chance of misunderstanding. |
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