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Agenda. Review 2008 Rules changes Answer test questions associated to the new rulesTime permitting review crease rules. Rule 1-6-1 Goalie and his crosse. This crosse shall be used by the required designated goalkeeperClarifies that the goalie stick must be used by the goalie and that a pro
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1. NFHS Lacrosse2008 Rules Changes&Crease RulesFebruary 2008
2. Agenda Review 2008 Rules changes
Answer test questions associated to the new rules
Time permitting – review crease rules
3. Rule 1-6-1 Goalie and his crosse This crosse shall be used by the required designated goalkeeper
Clarifies that the goalie stick must be used by the goalie and that a properly equipped goalie must be on the field at all times
Always has been a requirement to have a goalie on the field at all times.
Can’t pull a goalie to use an extra middie or attack player
Properly equipped Goalie ?
Crosse dimensions (unchanged)
40” to 72” length (vs 40” to 42” and 52” to 72”)
10” to 12” at the top inside measurement (vs 6˝” to 10”)
Equipment differences (Rule 1-9-1-k, pg 17)
Throat protector
Chest protector
Arm pads - optional
May wear shin guards and football pants with/without pads
4. Equipment Changes Rule 1-6-2 – Eliminates the requirement for a ball stop
Ball stops are irrelevant with today’s sticks
No advantage for a stick without a stop
No other stick changes – end caps, string length, etc
Rule 1-9-1-g – Jerseys must completely cover the shoulder pads
Assist with game administration
Originally adopted in 2003, now implemented
Rule 1-9-1-h – All players must wear shorts of the same dominant color
Violations penalized before start of game.
Uniform violations penalized as Rule 6-5-3
Illegal Procedure – if uniforms can’t be fixed before start of game, technical foul, award opening faceoff to opposing team at center X.
No additional uniform violations
Officials – Pre-game on field – more focus on player uniforms and equipment
Correct problems before game starts
Allow enough time to perform proper uniform and equipment checks
5. Rule 2-1-1 – Required number of players A team must start the game with at least 10 players
Forfeit if a team can’t field 10 players
Consistent with other sports
6. Rule 4-6-3 Shot out of bounds Clarification To determine which player is closest to the ball and will get possession
The ball is OB when it crosses the plane of the endline or sideline
The stick is not considered part of the players body following a missed shot
No rule change, clarification only
No dramatic stretch for ball by players
Players must be inbounds to be considered closest to the ball
7. Rule 6-10-2-a – Offensive Stalling When a team has been given a stalling warning – not in the last 2 minutes of the game
“Keep it in”
Stalling rules remain in effect until either
A goal is scored or
The defense gains possession of the ball
Remains in effect :
When shot goes OB and A awarded possession
A shoots and A recovers shot in field of play
A calls timeout
B fouls, time serving, and A retains the ball
B deflects the ball, it goes outside the attack box/goal area, A regains possession and brings it back in within 10 seconds after possession
8. Points of Emphasis Mouthguards – required, yellow or highly visible color, must cover all upper or lower teeth
Sportsmanship and flagrant misconduct
Coaches, players, and officials MUST be professional at all times
Includes fans
Coaches must support and help officials to enforce
Game balls – must include NFHS authenticating mark
Officials – check before game starts
9. Situations During the last minute of the 4th quarter with team A leading by 4 goals and (a) in possession in the goal area (“keep it in”) or (b) a loose ball. The trail official notices a substitute entering the field from the bench area. The trail looks back and notices there is no B goalie on the field and the sub is an extra midfielder
Ruling – a) flag down, slow whistle, technical foul on B, b) play on – award possession to A. In both a and b during stoppage of play the goalie must re-enter the game
Before the start of the game (a) Team A is wearing jerseys that do not meet specifications or (b) one player of team A is wearing multicolored sweatpants.
Ruling – In both (a) and (b) the R should instruct Team A head coach to correct the problem before the start of the game. If it can, no foul. If it can’t – illegal procedure, award ball to Team B at center x. No additional uniform penalties for the remainder of the game.
10. Situations A1 shoots towards the goal. The ball goes OB over the end line. A2 and B3 are running to the end line, as ball crosses end line both A2 and B3 have one foot touching the end line.
Ruling – A2 and B3 are not players because they are OB, lead official must determine the closest in bounds player to the ball when it crosses the end line.
Team A has been warned to “keep it in” in the 2nd quarter. (a) Team A shoots and the ball bounces off the goal and goes to midfield. Team A recovers the loose ball. (b) Team A shoots, recovers the loose ball and calls timeout. Is the offensive stalling warning still in effect ?
For both (a) and (b) – YES. In (a) Team A has 10 seconds to get the ball in the goal area once they are in possession past midfield. In (b) the stalling warning will be issued as soon as the ball enters the goal area after the timeout.
MECHANIC – official that restarts should tell Team A coach that stalling is still in effect and the players before restart. We don’t want Team A to step it in and quickly step out again. If they do, award ball to Team B.
11. Crease Rules GENERAL PRINCIPLES:
Crease belongs to the goalie
B can be in crease at any time
A cannot be in the crease at any time, even if illegally blocked/contacted (4-20-2)
A is responsible to avoid contact with goalie
A can only contact goalie on a loose ball outside the crease
Goalie contact extends outside the crease as long as goalie has any part in the crease
Ball stuck in mud or net – award ball to B goal line extended
“4 count” – no defensive player may be in the crease longer than 4 seconds – visible count by lead official
12. Crease Privileges – GOALIES (4-19) Only the goalie is given crease privileges (not all B)
Inside the crease – no contact with stick or body
Goalie may stop or block shot with any part of stick or body
Can’t pickup a loose ball
Ball inside/Goalie inside – A can play loose ball – no contact with goalie allowed
Ball outside/Goalie inside – A can play loose ball - contact with stick allowed (no body contact)
Goalie has right of follow-through on a legitimate pass. (Play-on and free clear)
Goalie completely outside the crease – can be blocked like any other player
Any B player may receive pass while in the crease
No player may carry ball into crease, results in turnover (technical foul 4-20-3, 6-5-2-k)
Most violations are play-on.
13. Crease Prohibitions for A A cannot enter crease at any time
A cannot leave his feet on a shot on his own and come down in the crease
If goal scored – disallowed, either before or after ball crosses the line
Illegal contact – no goal, enforce foul
14. Goalie Interference and Crease Violations
15. Plays Goalie B1 makes a save. The ball is loose in the crease and B2, also in the crease, picks up the ball. A1 checks B2’s stick, the ball becomes loose, and A2 picks up the ball, shoots and scores
Ruling – legal goal, only goalie is protected in the crease
Loose ball a) in the crease or b) outside the crease. Goalie reaches out to clamp the ball. A1 pokes at the goalie’s stick.
Ruling – a) Interference, play-on. Play continues or award possession goal line extended. b) legal – no possession.
Loose ball in the crease. A1 covers to rake it back. Goalie checks A1’s stick.
Ruling – legal, no interference. Comment – goalie initiated contact, not the A player.
Goalie makes a save. While trying to clear, an opponent legally checks the goalie back in the crease.
Ruling – illegal re-entry of crease. Ball awarded to A outside goal area.