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Refereeing the private schools: NCAA vs MIAA/NFHS Difference

This presentation covers the overall game approach, major rule changes in NCAA for 2019-2020, review of the 30-second shot clock, and the rule differences that may trip you up. It also provides tips on how to keep your head and rules straight during different game scenarios.

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Refereeing the private schools: NCAA vs MIAA/NFHS Difference

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  1. Refereeing the private schools: NCAA vs MIAA/NFHS Difference Eric Campbell EMLOA and NILOA

  2. Agenda • Overall game approach • Review NCAA major 2019-2020 rule changes • Review 30-second shot clock • The rule differences that might trip you up • Questions/final thoughts • This presentation will NOT cover everything and every detail

  3. Overall game approach • Your game week might look like this • MIAA HS JV/Varsity game on Tuesday • MBYLL Select double header Friday night • ISL game Saturday afternoon • MBYLL Classic games on Sunday • How are you supposed to keep your head and rules straight? • Prep beforehand • Pregame with crew • Communication: Pregame, during game and postgame

  4. NCAA 2019-2020 rule changes • Major rule changes • Substitution box adjusted • “The dive” • Definition of screening adjusted • 80-second shot not being implemented for the 2019 ISL/Private school season • We will review the 30-second shot clock rule and mechanics

  5. Substitution Box • Rule 1-10, pages 10 & 12 • “The substitution area shall be 10 yards wide. Two line shall be drawn on either side of the center line and extending past the scorer’s table” • Only players serving penalty time, players ready to substitute [imamate], official scorers, timer and CBO are allowed in the substitution area • “Benches for the competing teams shall be placed in the team area and, where physically possible, at least 10 yards from the sideline, parallel to the sideline”

  6. Substitution Box

  7. “The dive” Goal mouth*: Where the goalkeeper is located and plays his position aka “The ice cream cone” • Rule 4-21, page 45 • C: “If an offensive player, in possession of the ball and outside the crease area, dives or jumps in a direction away from the goal mouth and lands in the crease, the goal shall be allowed. Provided the ball enters the goal before contact with the crease, goaltender or the goal.” • D: “If an offensive player, in possession of the ball and outside the crease area, dives or jumps in a direction that is not away from the goal mouth and lands in the crease, the goal shall be disallowed. In addition, the player shall be penalized with a minimum of a 1-minute foul [unsportsmanlike]. The penalty may be releaseable or nonreleasable at the discretion of the referee. Contact is not required for a foul to be called under this rule. Defensive contact legal or illegal may have an effect on this play.” Goal mouth*

  8. “The dive” You make the call No goal

  9. “The dive” You make the call Goal: Pending no contact with the crease prior to ball crossing the goal line

  10. “The dive” You make the call No goal

  11. “The dive” You make the call Goal: Pending no contact with the crease prior to ball crossing the goal line

  12. “The dive” You make the call • Clip 9: Vermont vs. Utah • What we likely saw in real time • In review and with input here is how it should have been called

  13. “The dive” You make the call • Clip 10: Furman vs. Duke • What we likely saw in real time • In review and with input here is how it should have been called

  14. “The dive” You make the call • Clip 11: Furman vs. Duke • What we likely saw in real time • In review and with input here is how it should have been called

  15. Definition of a screen • Rule 6-5a, page 62 • “No offensive player shall move into and make contact with a defensive player with the purpose of blocking a defensive player from the man he is playing, nor may the offensive player hold his crosse rigid or extend his crosserigid to impede the normal movements of the defensive man. If contact is made between offensive and defensive players as a result of the offensive player’s setting a screen, the offensive player must be motionless before the contact occurs. Illegal contact must be made by the player setting the pick, which may include contact with his crosse. In establishing and maintaining legal screening tactics, the screener shall: • Stay within his vertical plane with a stance in which the inside of the screener’s feet is no wider than shoulder width apart and shall not lean into the path of an opponent or extend hips into that path, even though the feet are stationary. • Not be required to face in any particular direction at any time. • No player, while moving, shall set a screen that causes contact and delays an opponent from reaching a desired position.”

  16. Reviewing the 30-second shot clock • The shot clock is put on at the crews discretion • Triggers to consider • Offense isn’t creating scoring opportunities: Change in offense that no longer attacks the goal, not setting picks to create offense • Offensive player with a clear path to the goal and turns away • “Possession shots” • Offensive player has a defensemen “hung” at X and the offensive player stops creating offense (dodge, pass or make a move to the cage) from X after some time has passed

  17. Reviewing the 30-second shot clock • Officiating mechanics during the shot clock • Shot clock shall start and stop with the whistle • Penalty or loose ball play-on by the defense will reset the shot clock during an existing stall warning (shot clock). A reset signal shall be used by the officials • A shot that hits the goal pipe or rebounds off of the goalkeeper nullifies the shot clock • If a shot hits a defensive team player other than the goalkeeper does not satisfy the criteria for a shot on goal • In an existing flag down situation (prior to any shot clock warnings), an offensive team can be called for stalling • Neither team shall be called for stalling during a man advantage • If the period ends during a shot clock situation, the shot clock is no longer in effect.

  18. Reviewing the 30-second shot clock • Officiating mechanics during the shot clock • Timeouts • A timeout by the defensive team will reset the shot clock • A timeout by the offense and the shot clock will remain on and at the time the time out was called • Shot clock is put on and doesn’t start • Likely the trail official should recognize the situation, count for five seconds and stop play, unless there is an scoring opportunity. Clock will reset to 25 and play is to resume

  19. 30-second shot clock: Signals Initiate Shot clock has been satisfied Shot clock violation

  20. Rule differences that might trip you up • Face-offs • Restarts • Stall in the last-two minutes: NO • Clearing • Flag down • Goalie out of the cage and restarts

  21. Questions and final thoughts

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