this actually helps because those NBA whistles sound so nice and sharp on broadcasts, but when i try blowing a whistle it does the shitty sound. This is a genius video
i swear this ref has money on the games he refs. made a call in todays game where he is 30 ft from the hoop calls a foul and the other ref who was literally next to the play didn't call it lol
@@garyholt2551 lol was not trying to get into your money was just asking anyway got to T you up from not commenting back but its all good. Stay safe out there in Round Ball.
Illegal. White 4, block, 3 shots. In NCAA men's mechanics, I'd use the "lower body displacement" signal and say "walks under" because, that is what the White player does.
Im sure a billion dollar organization is in the habit of hiring incompetent officials who go rogue all the time. These comments are ignorant and probably filled with pussies who dont have the balls to get on a court.
Seems pretty obvious that the foul occurs on the shot before the horn...send the teams to the bench and let him shoot three free throws then head to the half.
Yes, legal of course. Ray is confused with the initial spin/toss which is just a post player simulating the catching of an entry pass while working out.
This is an illegal dribble (double dribble). If she leaves off the first release of the ball, it is legal. A player may start the dribble by throwing the ball to the floor with one or two hands.
@@garyholt2551 I think hes saying you can't go from pivot post move into the two handed dribble, it has to be a two handed dribble right from the catch of the ball. you can't wait in the three step iso attack then dribble.
When dribbler moved to his left, the defender initiated contact. I don't see this as clear "chest to chest" or "to and through" situation, certainly not enough to question judgement of the calling official.
The defender moved back at a 45 degree angle towards the BE logo. Watch his right foot, and follow that path. He's not moving INTO the defender. He is moving obliquely, which, by rule, is 100% legal. And looking at plays is how we get better...even those on this video. I've been on training videos (correct and incorrect) in front of many, many referees. There's no shame in that.
Disagree. He establishes LGP when he has two feet on the floor, facing the dribbler. He maintains his LGP by moving obliquely, which is legal as well. Offense initiates the contact.