Kara Lawson | The Boneyard

Kara Lawson

Yeah, I really enjoyed her diatribe about how Dillard got fouled, on a 3 point shot, by Lou and how fair of a call it was because the shooter jumped into Lou's hand. 99.9% of the time it is a non call. But with these 3 refs, you never know what they are going to call.
 
Yeah, I really enjoyed her diatribe about how Dillard got fouled, on a 3 point shot, by Lou and how fair of a call it was because the shooter jumped into Lou's hand. 99.9% of the time it is a non call. But with these 3 refs, you never know what they are going to call.
The refs did seem to have it in for us.
 
Yeah, I really enjoyed her diatribe about how Dillard got fouled, on a 3 point shot, by Lou and how fair of a call it was because the shooter jumped into Lou's hand. 99.9% of the time it is a non call. But with these 3 refs, you never know what they are going to call.
That's a pro move by Dillard. Watch the NBA, and you will see players like James Harden, Steph Curry and Kyrie Irving do the exact same thing when a defender is standing there with their arm extended.
 
The refs did seem to have it in for us.
Well, I thought in the first half they called a few on Buffalo that were too touchy but they certainly changed their focus to us in the second half.
I would love to see one of the "stat" BYers come up with a list of when we have "committed" anywhere near the number that were called tonight (on our starters only)!!!!
 
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Yeah, I really enjoyed her diatribe about how Dillard got fouled, on a 3 point shot, by Lou and how fair of a call it was because the shooter jumped into Lou's hand. 99.9% of the time it is a non call. But with these 3 refs, you never know what they are going to call.
That was a foul. Very smart play by the Buffalo player. Lou got lazy and dropped her hands. Spot on analysis by Kara Lawson.
 
I was confused by a lot of the travel calls on Collier. There was one where she dribbled the ball and then took a step and they called a travel when she took the step. Maybe I missed what the ref saw, but I was surprised by some of the calls tonight.

As for Kara, she is one of the best analysts and I love hearing about her breaking down a play. She’s great at calling out the intricacies and fallacies of plays.
 
Yeah, I really enjoyed her diatribe about how Dillard got fouled, on a 3 point shot, by Lou and how fair of a call it was because the shooter jumped into Lou's hand. 99.9% of the time it is a non call. But with these 3 refs, you never know what they are going to call.
 
It should have been a foul on Dillard since she initiated contact .. NBA rules are about entertainment, not about basketball .. Harden 'walks' on his step-back jumper but the refs allow it, eh?
 
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Yeah. I agree. Kara just knows, or has that feel for, the game and knows the when to strike that right balance for comments... an all-star.
 
Lawson's fantastic. Love seeing the support UCONN fans here have for her. Here's a good read on Lawson from her senior year if anyone is interested. Provides a little more insight about her background...not at all surprised to see she was an excellent student and had aspirations to be a lawyer. She seems like the type who'd thrive in any field she went in to:
LAWSON REWROTE FATHER'S GAME PLAN
 
Lawson is as good as there is, IMHO.
Like art and music, opinions vary. I feel Kara is the most knowledgeable announcer out there and expresses her thoughts well. Unfortunately, the past 2 years she has slipped into a monotone, low key style that detracts from her messages.
 
Lawson's fantastic. Love seeing the support UCONN fans here have for her. Here's a good read on Lawson from her senior year if anyone is interested. Provides a little more insight about her background...not at all surprised to see she was an excellent student and had aspirations to be a lawyer. She seems like the type who'd thrive in any field she went in to:
LAWSON REWROTE FATHER'S GAME PLAN

I love Kara but then some one reminds me she went to TN. :eek::oops::confused:;)
 
That's a pro move by Dillard. Watch the NBA, and you will see players like James Harden, Steph Curry and Kyrie Irving do the exact same thing when a defender is standing there with their arm extended.
Its not a shooting foul in the NBA
 
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That was a foul. Very smart play by the Buffalo player. Lou got lazy and dropped her hands. Spot on analysis by Kara Lawson.
I was worried that Dillard would try that all game but we lucked out. Dillard is some competitor.

I watched the Buffalo-Rutgers game, as well. After two consecutive plays in which Dillard drew fouls (one on a drive, one a lean-in jumper), Lawson brought up her proclivity for getting to "her second home," the foul line. Kara noted that she (Dillard) has obviously worked hard at drawing fouls...plus she has the talent to pull it off.

Per another comment that Kara has also picked up a more low-key delivery (even monotonish), perhaps being on the air day-in, day-out as an NBA analyst has made her adapt that style to save her voice.
 
That was a foul. Very smart play by the Buffalo player. Lou got lazy and dropped her hands. Spot on analysis by Kara Lawson.

Our players where a little lazy today. They were getting beat to most loose balls and reaching out instead of moving their feet.
 
It should have been a foul on Dillard since she initiated contact .. NBA rules are about entertainment, not about basketball .. Harden 'walks' on his step-back jumper but the refs allow it, eh?
I was going to reply to the "it's what they do in the NBA" post that when I was growing up, it did matter who initiated the contact but I figured that I would get slammed for saying that.
 
She went to TN, would have stuck a dagger in our hearts, if given the chance, and sometimes talks way too much. Otherwise, Kara is great!
 
It should have been a foul on Dillard since she initiated contact .. NBA rules are about entertainment, not about basketball .. Harden 'walks' on his step-back jumper but the refs allow it, eh?
I beg to differ with your interpretation of the rules, specifically whether "initiating contact" is the deciding factor for a foul. The real question is ownership of space, and according to the rules, no player (offensive or defensive) owns any space except what she occupies and what is directly over her head or (when she jumps) under her feet.

That is clearest in the case where an offensive player is driving with the ball, and a defensive player has her arms stretched out horizontally away from her body. If the offensive player drives directly into her outstretched arm while she (the defender) remains absolutely motionless, then by rule, it is a holding foul on the defender rather than a charging call on the offensive player. That is because no defender owns the space occupied by her outstretched arm. If she wants to stop the drive, she has to get her body in front of the driving player and establish position -- sticking out her arm (or even having stuck it out before the contact) does NOT suffice to get a charging call.

In this case, Lou extended her arm past the vertical in Dillard's direction. She did not own the space occupied by her outstretched arm, so all Dillard had to do to draw a foul was make contact with the extended arm as part of her shooting motion. The call was correct.
 
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I was confused by a lot of the travel calls on Collier. There was one where she dribbled the ball and then took a step and they called a travel when she took the step. Maybe I missed what the ref saw, but I was surprised by some of the calls tonight.

As for Kara, she is one of the best analysts and I love hearing about her breaking down a play. She’s great at calling out the intricacies and fallacies of plays.
The travel calls and screen fouls are just spur of the moment subjective calls by most refs.
 
I beg to differ. Furthermore, I've seen all the players I mentioned turn that move into a 4-pt play by forcing contact while knocking down a 3 pt shot.
Its called the "Rip through rule", unless the team is in the penalty its NOT a shooting foul as the offensive player is not , YET, in his (NBA) shooting motion. I tried to attach the video of the rule but failed.
 
Its called the "Rip through rule", unless the team is in the penalty its NOT a shooting foul as the offensive player is not , YET, in his (NBA) shooting motion. I tried to attach the video of the rule but failed.
Here’s the rub. It’s still a foul on the defender, and it’s not a shooting foul only “if the offensive player has not started his shooting motion.” Top NBA players like Durant, Curry, Irving and others are so good they are capable of initiating a “rip through” while shooting, sometimes knocking down the shot and earning an “and one.” You see it every night in the NBA.

IMO that’s exactly what Dillard did to Lou, and it was clearly a shooting foul.
 
Here’s the rub. It’s still a foul on the defender, and it’s not a shooting foul only “if the offensive player has not started his shooting motion.” Top NBA players like Durant, Curry, Irving and others are so good they are capable of initiating a “rip through” while shooting, sometimes knocking down the shot and earning an “and one.” You see it every night in the NBA.

IMO that’s exactly what Dillard did to Lou, and it was clearly a shooting foul.
Like all fouls it's up to the discretion of the ref.
I don't think they have the rule in college.
The rule, which is called the Harden rule was to stop those cheap fouls.
 
Like all fouls it's up to the discretion of the ref.
I don't think they have the rule in college.
The rule, which is called the Harden rule was to stop those cheap fouls.
Help me out here. We are in agreement that a rip through when the offensive player is determined to be in a shooting motion is in fact a shooting foul, and that it’s up to the refs to determine if the offensive player was in fact in a shooting motion???
 
All an offensive player (especially a star player) has to do is look at the basket and a foul is called. Nobody plays defense because there is a huge penalty for a solid effort called an "automatic foul". Dillard rolled into the lane like a bowling ball, initiating contact and the defensive player was always called for the foul. This and the touch fouls made the referees the story of the game.
 
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