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I think each fan base is going to think the refs favour the opponent in this one regardless of how the game gets called.South Carolina fans expect Iowa to get the friendly whistle.
I think each fan base is going to think the refs favour the opponent in this one regardless of how the game gets called.South Carolina fans expect Iowa to get the friendly whistle.
This is why I always laugh when coaches, teams & fans complain about the refs calling fouls. For once, I want to see and hear a coach go up to a ref and be like "Look. My players are hacking the crap out of the other team! You gotta call those fouls. Come on, now!"I find it quite funny that this beat writer makes such an effort to amplify his and the Maryland players feelings of an unfair foul disparity against the Terrapins while the photo his news outlet chose to use for his game story is Cardoso getting sandwiched & hammered by two Terps on one play.
this happens to SC bigs every game, all the time. SC fans are used to it.
View attachment 86139Terps get slowed down and jostled by South Carolina, fall 86-75
Maryland was whistled for a season-high 26 fouls and could not contend with the No. 1 Gamecocks’ physicality.www.thebaltimorebanner.com
What are you trying to suggest?I expect the same issue to arise for Iowa
Notre Dames did have some complaints in their game against the Terps. However, the difference in fouls was only 21-16. But 26-12 foul difference? Plus, the weird thing is the Terps didn't even try to foul at the end of the game.The complaints Maryland are making today are exactly the same ones Notre Dame fans were making after ND's loss to Maryland.
Sometimes you benefit from the officiating and sometimes your opponent does.
In this case, it's probably to be expected that the undefeated #1 seed and quasi-home team got the benefit of the doubt.
Didn't see any Maryland fan accounts tweeting things like this during the ND Game.The complaints Maryland are making today are exactly the same ones Notre Dame fans were making after ND's loss to Maryland.
Sometimes you benefit from the officiating and sometimes your opponent does.
In this case, it's probably to be expected that the undefeated #1 seed and quasi-home team got the benefit of the doubt.
Didn't see any Maryland fan accounts tweeting things like this during the ND Game.
Three plays are critical to understanding how the refs intended to call the game.
1. Boston’s first (or close to it) touch. She got the ball about 15 feet out on right wing. Turned, on ball defender flopped. Refs ignored her, giving Boston clear path. She drove to basket, second MD defender met her and also flopped. Refs ignored her too. Bucket.
2. Boston’s first foul, early in the 2nd Q. She blocked a MD guard with no one else nearby. MD player flailed about, officials blow the whistle, replays show perfectly clean block. Staley ripped into the officials.
This was a turning point in the officiating. From that point, the game was called much tighter, and Maryland started to accumulate fouls.
3. I’m glad someone else posted the egregious flop on the OOB play. It’s the most extreme example of what MD was doing all night.
Maryland tried two things - flopping to draw calls and playing aggressively inside.
The first was not tolerated from the officials at all, and they sent a message early they wouldn’t fall for it. This is good. There’s far too much of players exaggerating contact. If I wanted to see people roll around for a couple hours, I’d watch CONCACAF soccer.
MD should have stopped the theater and played basketball. I don’t feel sorry for the MD girl picking up her 5th foul on a flop where she exaggerated contact. You’re an athlete. Act like an athlete, not a dainty flower who must be protected by the officials.
The second reason MD picked up the fouls is the officials started calling a tighter game about halfway through the second. It still wasn’t touch fouls inside, but they definitely called things they had overlooked through the first quarter and a half.
I think the officials intended to “let ‘em play” in general, but Staley crawled all over them to the point they changed that approach.
MD didn’t adjust to that, probably because they couldn’t. When the other team is bigger and stronger across the front line and killing you on the glass, you either foul or you let them score. Maryland fouled.
- CONCACAF mention was probably appropriate because, like soccer, I’ve learned basketball is played differently in different regions. In courts across the South, you keep your feet. If you get knocked down? Weight room. Even if it was an offensive foul, it’s kind of embarrassing. Only charge that gets respect is one where you stand there on a fast break and take a full speed knee to the chest that everyone knows is coming. Otherwise, what’s wrong with you? Maybe you need to go to the kids’ court.
With All the physical banging of opposing centers during the games and not being called for fouls, you got to wonder how they called a foul on Meyers, when she barely touched Boston, if she touched her at all, during this called foul below. Meyers was completely taken out of the game with this call and her fifth foul call which also seemed to be a bad call.
I agree with the poster who stated the change in foul calling during a game is tough to adjust to during the rest of the game.