March 17, 2022 meeting, talking about basketball plays involving a guarding defender. Joshua Schroeder, chairman of the board for the Officials Institute, is leading this monthly Officials Institute meeting. These meetings are meant to educate basketball officials and help train how to apply rules properly in actual game situations. The Officials Institute believes that watching and discussing videos, such as these guarding plays, in a group helps build confidence in understanding how the rules apply in a game and using this meeting format creates opportunity to receive instant feedback from other officials. Being able to ask questions while analyzing a play is invaluable to learning and relearning what we already know or think we know about a rule. It also allows learning together by discussing rules as they are written but exploring alternative philosophies such as a common sense approach by applying the intent and purpose of those rules. All videos shown are actual high school basketball videos.
The video of this online meeting includes 17 different video clips, all revolve around the topic of guarding with a bonus clip of a State Finals game.
(1) - 1:28 - Dribbler tries to move down the sideline and contacts the defender. Block or player control?
(2) - 5:48 - Dribbler comes up the floor and again causes contact on a defender. Block was called but was it?
(3) - 7:15 - Player drives the lane and causes contact with a defender moving along side and jumping in the air.
(4) - 10:23 - This is a drive along the endline and another block is called. Did the Lead see it correctly?
(5) - 13:55 - Another sideline play with another block called. Was a leg involved?
(6) - 19:06 - Drive to the basket and a pushing foul called. Was there LGP? At the time of contact?
(7) - 24:00 - Contact on this one is slight and no whistle was blown. Good pass or should it be a foul?
(8) - 26:13 - Bump by a defender on the ball handler with no again no whistle. Should there have been?
(9) - 28:48 - Fast break, multiple passes, ending with a whistle for a foul, but was there even any contact?
(10) - 31:29 - Very common play with a bump at the top of the key and a block called. Did the defender move toward the opponent?
(11) - 34:27 - Defender flops and then an opponent trips over him. Foul or incidental?
(12) - 39:59 - Dribbler runs into a stationary defender but a block was called. Why?
(13) - 41:13 - Lots of something or nothing here. No whistle originally but maybe it was a double foul.
(14) - 43:45 - Defender moving toward the dribbler. Block called. Was he there first or no?
(15) - 45:46 - Drive down the middle of the lane. Was the block a correct call?
(16) - 47:48 - Two marginal calls back to back. Good consistency on threshold of contact.
(17) - 50:28 - Another drive to the basket. Another block called. What do you think?
Watching video clips is a good way to stay connected to the skill of officiating basketball. Education and learning is more effectively attained in a small group with some direction from a key speaker. Remembering specific rules and application of those rules is easier when visual aids are used to present in a way that is easy to listen to and understand.
The Officials Institute, and their monthly video review meetings, create a fun environment that allows participants to speak up and voice their opinions on plays without negative retribution or rebuttals. Everyone's opinion is worth something and adds to the overall learning experience that everyone should strive for, regardless of years of experience. Breaking down film in slow motion and freeze frames helps to "retrain our brain" so when we see the same plays in real time we are in a better position mentally to get the call right.
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All rules referenced in this video are taken from the official rules book provided by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS). To find out more about the NFHS, you can visit them at nfhs.org/
28 сен 2024