Hell I thought something happened to big Matt Elam.What’s elam ending?
What’s elam ending?
From an article:
At the first dead-ball whistle after the time goes below four minutes in the final quarter, the clock gets turned off. At that point, a target score is set, equaling the leading team’s point total plus seven. Then, the first team to hit that target score wins.
So, if my team is up by 10 when the Elam Ending activates, I need to score seven points before my opponent scores 17. It’s still an uphill climb for the trailing team, but it eliminates the parade of intentional fouls that can make the end of games interminable free-throw contests.
This is one of the best descriptions I’ve seen.
This is new and complicated. Therefore I fear it. Therefore I reject it.From an article:
At the first dead-ball whistle after the time goes below four minutes in the final quarter, the clock gets turned off. At that point, a target score is set, equaling the leading team’s point total plus seven. Then, the first team to hit that target score wins.
So, if my team is up by 10 when the Elam Ending activates, I need to score seven points before my opponent scores 17. It’s still an uphill climb for the trailing team, but it eliminates the parade of intentional fouls that can make the end of games interminable free-throw contests.
This is one of the best descriptions I’ve seen.
Funny enough, the TBT tournament on TV is a "first to 83 points" game. Gotta love basketball's ability to keep evolving.
This!!! The only reason it hasn't happened yet in these games is these coaches aren't even high school JV level.I think I get it.
So, four minutes BEFORE the final four minutes, you start intentionally fouling and stopping the clock every way possible, in an effort to cut the lead down before the Elam Ending commences at the 4 minute mark.
But there is even more incentive to disrupt the game and keep fouling, and stopping the clock, because even if you are going to come up a few points short, you’ve still got a chance and being down three when the Elam Ending commences is better than being down seven.
Right?
So you can stall until you get a layup?
.
Return of the exciting four corner offense?Remember when Seton Hall went like 12 minutes without scoring and the Cats went 10 during the same stretch.
So you can stall until you get a layup?
Maybe pass it around for 10 minutes without shooting.
This is probably the most inane suggestion I've ever seen.
Leave well enough alone.
So fouling out your best players with 4 mins left is your strategy? okay.It’s great for TBT but not for college or NBA. All it will do is make teams with actual coaches do what a previous poster said and start fouling before the Elam ending, or some teams will start hack a shaqing the worst free throw shooter on the floor after the Elam ending goes into effect.
If a game is tied 77-77, and the target score is 79, does that not make that period of time extremely exciting? A game winning shot is the equivalent of a buzzer beater there.Yeah let's totally eliminate any chance of any buzzer beater ever, plus cut at least two minutes of good basketball out of almost every single game.
That's exactly what fans want.
The team behind is the one that typically fouls.I'm not so sure about this. Teams are still going to foul like crap in the last four minutes. Fouling isn't only about stopping the clock, it's the gamble of hoping the guy you foul misses and then the hope that you can score on the other end. This rule doesn't change that at all, in fact with no time to worry about it probably extends the game.
You can play the shot clock for a defensive stop. No need at all to foul and give up points. A lot of you need to think it through.I'm not so sure about this. Teams are still going to foul like crap in the last four minutes. Fouling isn't only about stopping the clock, it's the gamble of hoping the guy you foul misses and then the hope that you can score on the other end. This rule doesn't change that at all, in fact with no time to worry about it probably extends the game.
You can play the shot clock for a defensive stop. No need at all to foul and give up points. A lot of you need to think it through.
The team behind is the one that typically fouls.
Are you saying that the losing team is going to intentionally put a guy at the free throw line when they only need 8 points to win the game?
Unless a guy is shooting under 50%, that seems really unlikely.
Well, yea. I mean they always look to foul the worst ft shooter and if your team isn't a great ft shooting team you're going get fouled a lot. Who wouldn't trade possibility of one or no points for the chance to score three on the other end?