I am simply a fan of UConn basketball, not a former player, coach or sportswriter. Will somebody please explain why our players repeatedly take blows to the eye, nose, mouth and head with completely different foul calls or lack thereof?
the KS player clearly hit Amari in the face intentionally, to ward her off
Now, don't get me wrong. I think the KS player [Samiya Nichols?] should have been ejected after having used that move repeatedly. However, I can see not thinking it was intentional. It looks like this is how she's figured out how to drive the lane. If she only did it the once, it seems like a stronger case for intentional foul than if she does it because she's been poorly taught. But if that's the real situation, then an ejection or two may be what it takes to get her to relearn her technique.She apparently uses that off arm like that on every drive!
I think the refs called a foul on Amari first, then had to address the flagrant, however the commentators were probably prattling on about some random thing. Too much dialogue and not enough color commentary. They were not prepared with much, if any player background, as neither knew why Paige has a thumb splint, and yet she's had it for most of the season.What l did not understand is that a common foul was also assessed on Amari and the KS player received 2 FT’s before Paige shot her FT’s. In several reviews of the play, it was clear that the KS player struck Amari in the face before any contact occurred between Amari & the KS player. By my way of thinking, the common foul should have been waved off with just a flagrant assessed against KS.
We'll need a basketball lawyer to weigh in (@stamfordhusky , where are you?), but I don't think the bolded statement above is necessarily correct. I think you meant to say that "if it is seen by an official, it is at least a common foul." Officials can call the common foul and then review the replay to determine whether it warrants an upgrade to "intentional".The way this plays out is
1) Any blow to the head is a foul.
a) If it is seen by an official, it is a common foul.
b) If it is not seen by an official, it can be reviewed at the next dead ball to evaluate if it is a flagrant foul (intentional contact).
1) If it is determined that the unseen contact was incidental, unintentional and in the flow of play no foul can be called. (the refs cannot use replay to call a missed common foul)
2) If it is determined that the contact was intentional/flagrant a technical foul is called by the refs (always after way too many minutes of review and deliberation) giving the receiver of the blow 2 foul shots and possession of the ball.
If it's a technical foul, can't anyone take the FTs? Didn't this happen when Amari was hit in the nose and after the review, Paige took the FTs or am I misinterpreting what happened?The way this plays out is
1) Any blow to the head is a foul.
a) If it is seen by an official, it is a common foul.
b) If it is not seen by an official, it can be reviewed at the next dead ball to evaluate if it is a flagrant foul (intentional contact).
1) If it is determined that the unseen contact was incidental, unintentional and in the flow of play no foul can be called. (the refs cannot use replay to call a missed common foul)
2) If it is determined that the contact was intentional/flagrant a technical foul is called by the refs (always after way too many minutes of review and deliberation) giving the receiver of the blow 2 foul shots and possession of the ball.
You certainly mean Play by Play not color commentary. Womens game tend to have too much color commentary and not enought Play by Play. That is especially true for WNBA gaves. Doing good play by play requires a high degree of skill. With women they generally pick ex players or coaches to do both. The excessive prattling results when both in the booth become color commentators.I think the refs called a foul on Amari first, then had to address the flagrant, however the commentators were probably prattling on about some random thing. Too much dialogue and not enough color commentary. They were not prepared with much, if any player background, as neither knew why Paige has a thumb splint, and yet she's had it for most of the season.
Good points. I was using the terms interchangeably, however I agree they are not.You certainly mean Play by Play not color commentary. Womens game tend to have too much color commentary and not enought Play by Play. That is especially true for WNBA gaves. Doing good play by play requires a high degree of skill. With women they generally pick ex players or coaches to do both. The excessive prattling results when both in the booth become color commentators.
A significant reason the WNBA is not popular is that when announcers prattle on about everything but the game on hand it detracts from the game. A good play/play announcer can promote interest in each active game. It takes a good play/play person to know when to interject information and when to stick to what is happening on the court. That is doubly important for a good color announcer. They have to know when it is ok to interupt and when to shut up. Its about filling in spaces, not creating spaces where they do no exist.
Yes, that is what I meant.I think you meant to say that "if it is seen by an official, it is at least a common foul." Officials can call the common foul and then review the replay to determine whether it warrants an upgrade to "intentional".
Yes.If it's a technical foul, can't anyone take the FTs?
Basketball officiating can be so bad, at times. The NCAA makes so much money, they need to make it so that being a referee is a full time job with off season training updates, etc.I am simply a fan of UConn basketball, not a former player, coach or sportswriter. Will somebody please explain why our players repeatedly take blows to the eye, nose, mouth and head with completely different foul calls or lack thereof?
I feel Kansas intentionally or not were being physical with arms and hands flying. Intentional or not, they are fouls. Especially seeing how the game was being played. - Nica got mauled in the final minutes.I watch a lot of basketball outside of this team's games but have never seen a group that suffers so many shots to the head.
For some reason the use of the non dribbling arm as a clear out seems to be allowed unless it's very flagrant. Magic Johnson made it part of his game and Caitlin Clark does it as well. Maybe one of these seasons it will be a point of emphasis. Until then defender beware. I think it's BS that it's allowed.Now, don't get me wrong. I think the KS player [Samiya Nichols?] should have been ejected after having used that move repeatedly. However, I can see not thinking it was intentional. It looks like this is how she's figured out how to drive the lane. If she only did it the once, it seems like a stronger case for intentional foul than if she does it because she's been poorly taught. But if that's the real situation, then an ejection or two may be what it takes to get her to relearn her technique.
A very timely question because Texas is next up on the schedule. Most forum members will remember Katie Lou getting elbowed in the eye by a Texas player. No foul was called and Katie Lou ended up looking like she had gone a couple of rounds with Mike Tyson. During an NCAA tourney game Lou 2 was taking the Texas defense to task until she hit in the face by a Texas player and needed stitches to close the wound. I am not saying that the Texas players are overly aggressive or that certain referees miss a lot of calls against Texas. The two instances I cite are purely coincidental. However, just to be on the safe side the UConn staff may want to consiider fitted face masks for all of the Huskies.I am simply a fan of UConn basketball, not a former player, coach or sportswriter. Will somebody please explain why our players repeatedly take blows to the eye, nose, mouth and head with completely different foul calls or lack thereof?