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The coach handled the situation appropriately. Calling the TO was a quick and easy way to handle it. Once you and your partner were in the loop, you handled it appropriately and made a good decision.
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Jan G. Filip - San Jose, CA EBVOA Rules Interpreter Emeritus NCS Volleyball Officials Coordinating Committee Recorder CIF State Volleyball State Championships Referee (2005), Scorekeeper (2006-2007) & Libero Tracker (2010) PAVO State Referee (2014) / PAVO Certified Scorekeeper (2014) / PAVO Certified Line Judge (2012) USAV Junior National Referee (resigned 2013) / USAV National Scorekeeper (2014) |
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I'm no rules guru, but it sounds like you handled it properly to me. Why would we want to throw up any obstacles to a coach taking care of a situation like this?
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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I think you handled it great. The coach requested a time out much the way they would have in order to discuss a correctable error. In this case - no error - but something that needed to be corrected. It is a safety issue and not something that the R2 would necessarily see while performing their duties.
After correction - no time out charged.
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