? You mean a rebound?If it's so obviously not hitting the rim...why is the guy trying to grab it? Hmm?
Leebo said:The guy who made the call could not possibly have had an angle to see that it was wide right, so if anyone deems it the right call, it happened by blind luck.
Is the rule that the ball needs to have a chance of going in or a chance of hitting the rim? I think it was going to graze the rim but it obviously had no chance of going in.
But some are saying that it was the right call and then agreeing with you. So let me get this, the guy with no view of the play got the right call. Because it was luck? Do officials officiate on luck or the things they see with their eyes?
Was never, going to hit the rim.If he doesn't touch the ball, it's GOING to hit the rim. That is a lock-on correct call. You can't judge a ball that's gonna hit the rim isn't going to go in- not with how insane that game was ending.
It stinks for the AAC, but they got that call right.
It was a terrible call. Embarrassingly bad. And it hurt our conference.Because of a vast anti-AAC conspiracy, I hate it when we have to repeat ourselves around here.
It had no chance of going in - it had passed the cylinder and would have had to defy physics, gravity and everything in explored science to go in.
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What am I misreading?Its amazing how this inaccuracy has been perpetuated. I didn't realize this, the studio guys had no idea (and still don't) and the majority of the board doesn't get it. I thought it was common sense that if the ball had was going to hit the rim, goaltending is an easy call.
Yeah, I'm reading it the same as you. There was no way that shot was ever going into the basket.What am I misreading. It has to be on its downward flight (check) and have the possibility of of entering the basket (not checked). That's what 3.a.2 says. It has to have the ability to go into the basket. It fails to meet that.
Yeah, I'm reading it the same as you. There was no way that shot was ever going into the basket.
What am I misreading. It has to be on its downward flight (check) and have the possibility of of entering the basket (not checked). That's what 3.a.2 says. It has to have the ability to go into the basket. It fails to meet that.
And he's wrong.The NCAA dude on TV took the angle that if it had a chance to hit the rim, it had a chance to go in, which seems a bit weak. The rules should state that.
I misread you, then. Sorry.I think we are on the same page. My point is that a majority of people, myself included, didn't understand the rule.
Yeah, stating in the rules that there needs to be a possibility for the ball to enter the cylinder changes everything.I think we are on the same page. My point is that a majority of people, myself included, didn't understand the rule.
I think we are on the same page. My point is that a majority of people, myself included, didn't understand the rule.
Spanarkel thinks the shot might have been a curveball apparently.
Its amazing how this inaccuracy has been perpetuated. I didn't realize this, the studio guys had no idea (and still don't) and the majority of the board doesn't get it. I thought it was common sense that if the ball had was going to hit the rim, goaltending is an easy call.
The problem is, no one knows that. The chances are low that it was going to have a shot at going in, but it certainly would've hit the rim in some capacity, so you can interpret it as having the possibility of entering the basket just based solely on that - despite the probability being extremely low. The main point is, the SMU guy should never have had his hand there in the first place. It's a horribly timed jump for a rebound, and he has to have the control to know when to not go for the ball. It's unfortunate, but not wrong, and certainly not a conspiracy.What am I misreading?
(1) It has to be on its downward flight (check); andThat's what 3.a.2 says. It has to have the ability to go into the basket. It fails to meet that.
(2) have the possibility of of entering the basket (not checked).
The problem is, no one knows that. The chances are low that it was going to have a shot at going in, but it certainly would've hit the rim in some capacity, so you can interpret it as having the possibility of entering the basket just based solely on that - despite the probability being extremely low. The main point is, the SMU guy should never have had his hand there in the first place. It's a horribly timed jump for a rebound, and he has to have the control to know when to not go for the ball. It's unfortunate, but not wrong, and certainly not a conspiracy.
I have heard dozens of people discuss the call and t's running about 60% think it was the right callThe crew on set thinks it was the wrong call.
You can't know in those shots.I have heard dozens of people discuss the call and t's running about 60% think it was the right call
Replays show his hand above the rim and touching the ball on the way down - now I'm not saying that untouched it was going in but you can't say 70% of the shots where goaltending is called were going in as a fact
Gottlieb needs to get his eyes examinedThe bottom of the ball is below the rim. Was it going to levitate at that moment and take an immediate left turn?
it was still touched on the way down above the rimYou can't know in those shots.
This one was an obvious miss. Come on. It was about to carom off the side of the basket. Far different than many goaltends.