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Long Island District
Board # 41
Notes from the Interpreter
Mid-Season Review – 2010-11
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Pre Game Meeting…Suggestions, in addition to
the routine introductions and three questions asked of the coaches;
1) Inform captains and head coaches that substitutes must wait until
an official beckons them into the game. The incoming player should
not enter the court when the horn is sounded. Adherence to this will
enhance the substitution procedure and will help eliminate potential
issues; 2) Check and/or remind the head coaches that their seat, if
any, must be within the coaching box if they intend to make use of
the coaching box. Doing so eliminates potential issues after the
game has started.
Scorer & Timer Instructions…Referee, be
professional and thorough with instructions to the scorer and timer.
Be sure to designate each as the official scorer and timer and leave
them with the impression/understanding that they are part of the
officiating crew. Review the substitution procedure with them
thoroughly.
Substitutes/Substitution Procedure…Situations
where the official administering a throw-in has checked/looked to
the scorer and timer’s table, has had eye contact with partner(s)
and is ready to cause the ball to become live – it is too late to
accept substitutes. The game, by rule, can not be delayed to admit a
substitute who is in route to the table or whose coach is hollering
“sub, sub.” Ignore such situations and place the ball in play. Do
not delay the game! There are two teams and the situation matters to
both. The substitute did not meet the rule. The opposition may not
want the substitute in the game. The official is not being a “good
guy.” Instead, the official is positively affecting the illegal team
and negatively affecting the opposition. Simply enforce the rule.
Communicating With Head Coach And Player(s)…
When the ball is live, do not be distracted by coaches or players.
Do not talk or respond in any other form/manner. All
attention/concentration must be devoted to the play on the court
when the ball is live.
Closely Guarded…Don’t be lax/slow in reacting
to a closely guarded situation. The defense is expecting the rule to
be enforced. Six feet is a substantial distance. Know what six feet
is. If you don’t know what six feet is, how do you know when it is
not six feet? Begin the five second count. There is no intense or
specific defensive stance required of the defensive player.
Time-Out…*Head Coaches and players only make a
Request for a time-out. Officials Grant the time-out. Upon
seeing/recognizing the source of the request, the official now must
Check to see if the request may be granted. * Don’t hurry and/or get
excited. * The time-out Request and the Granting is simply another
ruling situation in the game. * The “off ball” official, very often
near the head coach, must be composed/careful/cautious about
granting the time-out request. First and foremost Player Control
must exist in order to grant the time-out. * The ball being pinned
to the floor by one or two hands is not player control. * The
time-out, as does every other situation, matters to and affects both
teams. *Summary, to react to a request by sounding the whistle and
carelessly granting a time-out, when there is no player control,
bails out one team is very unfair to the other team.
Traveling…*Jump stop, be aware of the very
athletically fluid one step then second step landing – it is
illegal. It is a major advantage to the offensive player. That is
exactly why she/he does so. * Be composed in the situation where the
moving dribbler ends the dribble, obtains a pivot foot then steps
with the non-pivot foot followed by lifting the pivot foot and
reaches out with that foot and passes prior to the pivot foot
re-touching the floor – legal movement. * Reminder, the pivot foot
may be lifted to pass or try for goal.
At The Site Of The Foul…After sounding the
whistle and stopping the clock/indicating a foul with the arm
extended and a closed fist, remain at the site and complete all
required at the site information (read the manual, pages 53 & 141).
Don’t run away. Don’t walk & talk.
At the Reporting Area…Hustle to the reporting
area. Stop. Complete all required at the reporting area information
(read the manual, pages 52, 53,55 & 141 & 142). Hustle to the free
throw or throw-in coverage position.
Play Near A Boundary Line…When there is
congestion/defensive pressure (more than one player and the ball)
near a boundary line, be careful not to be so concerned with the
boundary line and the ball that you “tuck your chin/lower your chin”
downward to the extent that you limit your FOV cone. Doing so,
limits ones ability to view the whole play – the other player(s).
Often a ruling of traveling or out-of-bounds is made. When in fact,
an opposing player has bumped the player who has the ball causing
what you view as a violation. Proper coverage matters, there is a
possession at stake.
Held Ball? Foul?...A player has ended her/his
dribble or is trapped. The offensive player’s ability is restricted
by only being able to pivot. A defender(s) pursues the ball.
While the offensive player is pivoting and/or
moving her/his arms to get freedom or avoid a held ball, it is
extremely difficult for a defender to get to the ball without
contacting (hacking, bumping, etc.) the offensive player. It is very
difficult to create a held ball without fouling in such a situation.
Why are there so many held ball rulings? Think about it!!
Three-Seconds…Be a good three-second official.
The free throw lane’s proximity to the basket and the high
percentage rate of scoring from that area makes the coverage and
attention vital to fair play. The lead official ball watching,
beyond her/his PCA and neglecting the free throw lane coverage is
unfair to the defensive player and team. The Trail and Center
official must provide free throw lane coverage when the ball is not
in their PCA, by expanding their FOV cone.
Continuous Motion…It is a rule given right of
an offensive player, with the ball, to try for goal anytime, anyhow,
and anyplace on the court, provided he/she does so legally. The
player needs only to have ‘merely’ begun foot, body, arm movement,
etc. which habitually are associated with trying for a goal. The
‘shooter’ or a teammate being fouled does not cause the ball/play to
become dead. The official’s sounding of the whistle and stopping the
clock simply stops the clock and indicates a foul. The ball remains
‘live.’
A foul committed by a teammate of the
‘shooter’, prior to the try being released. Does cause the ball to
become dead and therefore the try ends. THE ‘Shooter’s’ FOOT/FEET
BEING IN TOUCH WITH THE FLOOR WHEN THE FOUL BY THE DEFENSE OCCURS
HAS NO BARING ON THE RULE. Officials must be careful to not penalize
a player who is simply carrying out her/his rule given right to try
for goal. The player has that right whether sitting on the floor,
standing on the floor or while airborne. If the try has simply
‘merely’ begun and there is a foul by the defense, the culprit is
the defender – don’t penalize the wrong player. There is no place in
basketball for the comment “on the floor” or the non-signal of
pointing to the floor. It is gross misinformation and has caused
much harm in recent years.
Contact…Freedom of movement is rule assured
provided the player arrives at any spot on the court first and does
so legally. The understanding of the rule is vital and applies
equally to defense and offense. Concerns are -- *Bumping, holding
cutters – illegally preventing legal movement. * Offensive player
driving to the basket area and bumping, warding off a defender – too
often the offensive player is “bailed out” by the official ruling a
foul on the defender. * Verticality - the offensive player when too
far under the basket, even beyond the plane of the backboard, or
otherwise near the basket jumps into the defender who is playing
legal as per verticality. Too often the defender is unfairly
penalized while the guilty party is awarded a goal and a free throw.
Verticality, as per all rules, applies to both defense and offense.
Questions are, in each of the situations, – Who caused the contact?
What did the defender do wrong?
Contact Following The Release Of A Try For
Goal…Whether it is a two or three point try, after the ball is
released, if the ‘shooter’ is in touch with the floor or has
returned to the floor and the ‘ex-shooter’ is fouled – it is a
common personal foul whether the try is
successful or unsuccessful. The penalty is,
the awarding of the ball for a throw-in, awarding a one and one or
two free throws depending upon prior to or after the bonus is in
effect. The penalty is not one, two, or three free throw as per ‘act
of shooting.’
Crew Of Two…When the throw-in is located on
the Lead official side of the basketline and below the free throw
line extended, be a thinking person’s official. Don’t automatically
administer the throw-in as the Lead. Size up the situation, if there
is defensive pressure the coverage may be improved by the Lead
moving to the Trail position to administer the throw-in and the
Trail becoming the Lead.
Trail & Center Official(s)…Be active,
especially when the ball is not within your PCA. Read the situation
adjust your coverage positioning and your FOV cone. There are
thoroughly arrived at guidelines within the manual, however, there
are no magic spots cast in granite. In transition, don’t retreat
prior to reading the situation at hand. Additionally in transition,
especially when there is defensive backcourt pressure, the Center
official’s PCA is free throw line to free throw line. The Center
official’s FOV best covers across the court contact situations as
all too often the Trail and Lead FOV is very much hindered (straight
lined).
Multi Level Officials…Reminder to officials
who officiate at the high school and college levels – Honor each
level. Bring the appropriate ‘package’ to the game site. Bring the
appropriate rules code, mechanics, signals and overall mentality as
expected by the involved level. Doing anything short of complying
affects the coaches, players, partner(s) and very possibly the end
result of the games.
PCAs…Work at mastering the PCA technique. The
concept/technique is the coverage master plan for a crew. Implement
the FOV cone coverage. Be aware, widen, expand, lengthen your FVO
cone depending upon whether the ball is within your PCA or not. It
is vital to have a vivid mental impression of PCAs and FOV cones.
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updated
01/22/11 |
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