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- Feb 20, 2018
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As soon as I saw that called charge I had to text my friend who coached women's bball to see if the restricted area was used in the women's game also. BOTH her feet were inside the circle, it HAS to be a block!
The restricted area only applies to secondary defenders. Griffin was running down the court and got the ball on a pass and Richards became the primary defender, meaning all she has to do is be in legal guarding position which she was. If she was considered the secondary defender then the call would have been a block. If Westbrook would have kept the ball and drive since she was being guarded by Ursin and Richards would have slid in front of her then it would have been a charge. That is why it was not questioned during the broadcast.By the end of the game the refs had not only swallowed their whistles, they had digested them. But putting aside the many missed calls on Baylor fouls, possibly the worst call of the game was the charge (on Griffin, I think) where the defender was standing in the restricted area. That is never a charge.
It's interesting how so many calls of this nature can go unnoticed during the game, but when a no-call happens in the last 10 seconds of the game, everybody cries foul, and wants compensation.
You can turn and twist this picture like a "rubiks cube" all day. It's a foul any way you look at it!! It was a no-call. Seeing this picture is why I don't care about all of the crying and whining from naysayers about Carrington's no-call. I don't believe anyone from UConn Nation is suggesting Carrington wasn't fouled. Replays and still photos suggest she was. All we're saying is what about the numerous plays like this that weren't called either? Paige got hammered several times and didn't get a call. So did Christyn. What's good for the goose, is good for the gander. Let's move on. Nothing more to see here.