Nope. If I'm jogging backwards and you run through me on the way to the basket, that's a charge on you.In the Eddie movie Whoppi shows that to take a charge you have to plant the feet right? Is that still pretty much the difference b/t a blocking vs charging foul?
I honestly think the dramatic nature of the signal is part of the problem. We know that some refs like attention. The only call that gets more is a technical foul.You can tell instantly when they are going to call a charge. They start the one foot hop before punching the air like they are trying to knock out Mike Tyson.
But let's say you're running sideways. And the offensive player makes contact while he's going up for a dunk over your slow ***. You fall down. Still a charge?Nope. If I'm jogging backwards and you run through me on the way to the basket, that's a charge on you.
I think you've missed my point. Your feet don't have to be planted to draw a charge. You only have to have legal guarding position.Well obviously that doesn't count because I wouldn't have my feet planted then!![]()
That one's a little bit tougher. Usually that's called on the defender. But if I'm running alongside you, and you initiate the contact to the point where I', knocked down, TECHNICALLY it should be a foul on you. I believe most of those should be no calls, but they're usually called against the defense.But let's say you're running sideways. And the offensive player makes contact while he's going up for a dunk over your slow ***. You fall down. Still a charge?
No...as I said in the thread "obviously on the Wenyen call, they completely missed that one."In your opinion was the call on Wenyen a good call and a good defensive play?
The rule does state that you can't move into a player's path who has ALREADY LEFT THE FLOOR. I don't see that one missed very often. Some are pretty close though.And it's the crux of why the rule needs modified, clarified, whatever-fied.
It's like the catch rule in the NFL currently. If 10 people watch a play and say "that's a catch", but somehow it's not on a technicality, then it's a stupid rule that needs to be changed.
Ditto blocks/charges. Maybe it's not THAT clear-cut, but if 9 out of 10 lifelong basketball fans watch a play and say "That's a block" (maybe 5 different times a game) on a charging call, then there's something wrong with the rule, or the way the rule is being interpreted.
And one area where players should absolutely HAVE to be stationary is if they're playing help defense on a player who has already left the ground. It's completely absurd that a defender can slide under a guy who's already in the air and actually get the call, yet you see it all the frickin' time in the college game (not so much in the NBA).
Wenyen's call should have been a NO Call or a blocking play IMO..Maybe the ref was out of position and didn't see that the angle was only a brush on the arm and not a ram-through on Wenyen's part.The block/charge rule is never called the same from game to game and even one end of the court to the other. The call on Wenyen was an obvious block. There were other plays called a block that probably should've been a charge.
Why do people keep saying that they should give the coaches a challenge.....what good would it do? Did't they go to the moniter the other day? I don't recall a time where they go to the monitor and change a call. Those bastards are so full of themselves that they don't like to admit they are wrong.
Are you a basketball official?I don't disagree with the OP, but it's nothing new. It's been a problem for a long as I can remember. The reason is that the default call in college is always the charge. If it's remotely close, they are going to call a charge. It should be the exact opposite. Unless someone gets blatantly run over, it should be a block, or actually in many cases, no call at all.
Wenyen's call should have been a NO Call or a blocking play IMO..Maybe the ref was out of position and didn't see that the angle was only a brush on the arm and not a ram-through on Wenyen's part.
But let's say you're running sideways. And the offensive player makes contact while he's going up for a dunk over your slow ***. You fall down. Still a charge?
Because it sure as hell shouldn't be.
But far too often in college game, it is.
This isn't the 1950's, where Jimmy Chitwood should just pull up for a pretty little 12 foot jump shot, and not try to force anything going to the hoop because somebody might stand in front of him and then fall down (and because Jimmy only has a 20 inch vertical, anyway). That's just not the way the game has developed, and most fans like it that way (which is why the most popular NBA players are almost invariably the ones who can make the most spectacularly athletic moves to the basket- Dr. J, Jordan, Kobe, LeBron). Yet many refs call the game like Jimmy Chitwood is still the norm.
I agree. Move out of the way or get ran over.Get rid of the rule. Just rip it out of the rule book.
Either play defense or get out of the way.
You took the words right out of my mouth. I'm a basketball official. And 95% of fans have NO CLUE what the rule is.You beat me to it. :clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap::clap:
You took the words right out of my mouth. I'm a basketball official. And 95% of fans have NO CLUE what the rule is.
1. Can't believe some are referencing NBA officials as the standard; they are terrible. Won't call a travel, and If college officials swallowed their whistle in the last 2 minutes of a game like they do in the NBA this board would blow a gasket.
2. Basketball is still a team game (although less than in the past), and part of that is Team D. Part of Team D is allowing help side defenders the ability to take a charge.
3. I agree block/charges are a problem. I don't think replay is the answer.
Based on your point # 2, it sounds like you're willing to make it illegal to play defense in basketball. Just get out of the way because the offense always has the right of way. Quoting the high school rulebook..."A player who is moving with the ball is required to stop or change direction if a defensive player has obtained a legal guarding position in his/her path."It doesn't change the fact that it's not consistently called correctly. You can argue all you want about fans not knowing the exact wording of the rule. That doesn't matter at all. What matters is that it doesn't magically make the rule something that is working and conducive to athletic free-flowing basketball if the officials on the court aren't consistently calling the correct call and/or punishing the more athletic player for being athletic.
1. NBA officials are MUCH higher paid, as well as held to a MUCH higher standard. If your main gripe about them is their lack of travel calls, and letting players play on, you clearly don't watch any NBA basketball and/or hate games that don't become free throw tests. NBA officials aren't perfect, but there's absolutely no debate that the product that is put on the floor during NBA games is much more free flowing than in college and the officials in college absolutely play a part in that. They need to be properly trained or held accountable for their poor games, which they are not in the slightest like they are in the NBA.
2. The charge/block rule as it's currently called doesn't reward team basketball. It punishes an athletic player jumping over a player because the refs would rather reward a player that is just standing there over a player trying to make a play. Throw in the lack of consistency in the call being made correctly and it's just a mess. If it were called correctly and tweaked a bit I would agree with you, but it's not.
3. Replay might not be the answer, and I'd probably lean a little more on your side thinking that it isn't. But the rule needs to be tweaked or the refs need to be better trained/held more accountable.
THANK YOU. Frankly I'm shocked at the number of posters in this thread that see legal guarding position as a nuisance to those trying to score.... [laughing]Based on your point # 2, it sounds like you're willing to make it illegal to play defense in basketball. Just get out of the way because the offense always has the right of way. Quoting the high school rulebook..."A player who is moving with the ball is required to stop or change direction if a defensive player has obtained a legal guarding position in his/her path."
Based on your point # 2, it sounds like you're willing to make it illegal to play defense in basketball. Just get out of the way because the offense always has the right of way. Quoting the high school rulebook..."A player who is moving with the ball is required to stop or change direction if a defensive player has obtained a legal guarding position in his/her path."
THANK YOU. Frankly I'm shocked at the number of posters in this thread that see legal guarding position as a nuisance to those trying to score.... [laughing]
Nice diversion. Let me quote what you said. "It punishes an athletic player jumping over a player because the refs would rather reward a player that is just standing there over a player trying to make a play." To me, it sounds like you're OK with an offensive player bulldozing a guy with good guarding position. Maybe you didn't mean what you said.Hey, good job at completely sensationalizing what I’ve said. I’ve been advocating for better consistency, and a tweak to the rules. How in the world you twisted that into what you just said I have no idea. I applaud the creativity though.
How is asking for better consistency and a tweak to the rules in any away decrying legal guarding position? Please, enlighten me with your wisdom.
Nice diversion. Let me quote what you said. "It punishes an athletic player jumping over a player because the refs would rather reward a player that is just standing there over a player trying to make a play." To me, it sounds like you're OK with an offensive player bulldozing a guy with good guarding position. Maybe you didn't mean what you said.
Yeah, I'm all in favor of consistency....the Gabriel call was pretty sad. I do believe if it's an ultra close call the tie should go to the offensive player.I not once said "good guarding position". Often times a player makes an athletic move that is perceived as "out of control" when in fact he is in control. It just looks like it to the ref when players have 40 inch verticals and 7 foot wingspans in some of these quick "bang bang" plays for lack of a better phrase.
If a defender is in good guarding position it doesn't matter how high the player is jumping or what great move they made, it's a charge like you said, and like the rule states. But when someone like Diallo rises up I feel like the defender's are forgiven more often for losing good guarding position or being a little out of place in a bang bang play rather than the offensive player being forgiven for trying to make a play. I think players like that get punished far too often.
I'm not saying it's an epidemic, but I would like the game to be as clean as possible. I think it can be better.
Yeah, I'm all in favor of consistency....the Gabriel call was pretty sad. I do believe if it's an ultra close call the tie should go to the offensive player.
It doesn't change the fact that it's not consistently called correctly. You can argue all you want about fans not knowing the exact wording of the rule. That doesn't matter at all. What matters is that it doesn't magically make the rule something that is working and conducive to athletic free-flowing basketball if the officials on the court aren't consistently calling the correct call and/or punishing the more athletic player for being athletic.
1. NBA officials are MUCH higher paid, as well as held to a MUCH higher standard. If your main gripe about them is their lack of travel calls, and letting players play on, you clearly don't watch any NBA basketball and/or hate games that don't become free throw tests. NBA officials aren't perfect, but there's absolutely no debate that the product that is put on the floor during NBA games is much more free flowing than in college and the officials in college absolutely play a part in that. They need to be properly trained or held accountable for their poor games, which they are not in the slightest like they are in the NBA.
2. The charge/block rule as it's currently called doesn't reward team basketball. It punishes an athletic player jumping over a player because the refs would rather reward a player that is just standing there over a player trying to make a play. Throw in the lack of consistency in the call being made correctly and it's just a mess. If it were called correctly and tweaked a bit I would agree with you, but it's not.
3. Replay might not be the answer, and I'd probably lean a little more on your side thinking that it isn't. But the rule needs to be tweaked or the refs need to be better trained/held more accountable.