I was told in another thread that I didn't know what I was talking about when I said I had seen technical shots after the final buzzer in a women's D1 basketball game. Here is proof it can and has happened.
Which is exactly what I posted before and was called wrong by many people here. The rules posted to prove I was wrong were NBA rules which are not the same.Referees remain in control of the game until they leave the court.
Technicals can also be issued BEFORE the 1 st period or quarter happens. For example, if the court is not set up correctly.Which is exactly what I posted before and was called wrong by many people here. The rules posted to prove I was wrong were NBA rules which are not the same.
When I was reffing it was when we signed the score book. That was the official end of the game.Referees remain in control of the game until they leave the court.
Please see recent Tennessee game.If a player is wearing a jersey that has a number not matching the number in the book, a technical foul will be called before the game starts.
I think in the TN game it wasn't caught until an in-game substitution.Please see recent Tennessee game.
I think the pregame roster was wrong because someone needed a different jersey due to a stain or tear. The name/jersey number on the roster didn’t match the players on the court.I think UConn was called for a pregame tech for a late ? submission of a player roster? Or there was an error on it?
Yes, that type of foul is much more common than folks realize. Rutgers had one at Syracuse because the Assistant Coach didn't turn in the roster on time. Happened to an opponent (I don't know what was specifically wrong) during a game I was at here in Arizona. Seen it a few times on TV.I think the pregame roster was wrong because someone needed a different jersey due to a stain or tear. The name/jersey number on the roster didn’t match the players on the court.
I recheck the Box Score = Ms. Wetta played 19 minutes took no 2 pointers , took noColorado Player was Kindyll Wetta, #15. She is a 5' 9" sophomore guard out of Castle Rock, Colorado.
Her high school was Valor Christian. She was on the PAC 12 ALL FRESHMAN TEAM and the
PAC 12 ALL DEFENSIVE team. She is noted for her many steals. Now she is noted for getting
belayed coal in her "Christian " stocking. As I recall Creighton beat Colorado (22-8) in
the first round of last year's NCAA tournament 84 - 74. Maybe she thought Marquette was
Creighton in different uniforms, or maybe she just has a thing about BIG EAST schools. , not NICE!
Yogi Berra was never wrong. Too deep to be immediately understood? Ahead of his time? Maybe.So Yogi Berra was wrong? The game isn't over even after it's over. And it starts before it starts.
Cool lolWhich is exactly what I posted before and was called wrong by many people here. The rules posted to prove I was wrong were NBA rules which are not the same.
So what's an illegal number? In those days, the only legal uniform numbers in amateur basketball were 3-5, 10-15, 20-25, 30-35, 40-45, and 50-55. The reason was because high school, college and AAU refs, when calling a PF, would signal to the official scorer the number of the fouling player by holding up outstretched fingers for each digit. Since there are only 5 fingers on each hand, that was the number limit for each uniform digit. And 1 and 2 were reserved for indicating the number of foul shots to be taken. The NBA allowed higher numbers (#9 Bob Pettit and #99 George Mikan come to mind).