Hall2012 wrote:The whistle shouldn't have been blown and obviously that was a huge break for the Hall, but the way they then handled the situation is what really turned it into a mess. They claimed it was a clock issue (perhaps it started a hair late, but no later than normal human reaction time IMO) but handled it like an inadvertent whistle. To those saying it should have gone to the possession arrow, I unfortunately see nothing supporting that in the NCAA Basketball rule book (if any of you know where it is, please correct me). What I see in the rule book is - since at the time of the inadvertent whistle, SJU had not gained possession yet, it was still considered in SHU possession and the ball had to be returned to them. Basically the only time when there is considered to be no team possession is after a shot attempt when nobody has secured the rebound yet. A deflected/loose ball is still considered to belong to the last team to have control of it (hence why loose ball scenarios don't reset the shot clock if the offense recovers it). Again, it still sucks for SJU because they almost certainly would have gained possession if the whistle didn't go, but at the time of the whistle they didn't have it yet.
I guess my point...it ultimately wouldn't have changed anything and wouldn't really make SJU fans feel any better about it, but rather than using the clock excuse the refs should have just admit it was an inadvertent whistle and said "sorry, we screwed up, this is how the rules require we handle it."
SJUBBALL wrote:Hall2012 wrote:Okay I changed my mind, I feel bad for Johnnies fans except Mayhem. With ridiculous takes like that, I'm actually laughing at his misery.
I’m glad you can separate him from the rest of the fans lol. Seton hall is a good, and exciting team that is OVERACHIEVING. That is something that St. John’s never does. We never overachieve, so I think mullinmayhem is just projecting his feelings of jealousy on seton hall for doing more with a team that was under estimated before the season.
Good luck to you guys, my beef is with the refs last night, not with your team and your program. You are doing a great job
billyfa wrote:Hall2012 wrote:The whistle shouldn't have been blown and obviously that was a huge break for the Hall, but the way they then handled the situation is what really turned it into a mess. They claimed it was a clock issue (perhaps it started a hair late, but no later than normal human reaction time IMO) but handled it like an inadvertent whistle. To those saying it should have gone to the possession arrow, I unfortunately see nothing supporting that in the NCAA Basketball rule book (if any of you know where it is, please correct me). What I see in the rule book is - since at the time of the inadvertent whistle, SJU had not gained possession yet, it was still considered in SHU possession and the ball had to be returned to them. Basically the only time when there is considered to be no team possession is after a shot attempt when nobody has secured the rebound yet. A deflected/loose ball is still considered to belong to the last team to have control of it (hence why loose ball scenarios don't reset the shot clock if the offense recovers it). Again, it still sucks for SJU because they almost certainly would have gained possession if the whistle didn't go, but at the time of the whistle they didn't have it yet.
I guess my point...it ultimately wouldn't have changed anything and wouldn't really make SJU fans feel any better about it, but rather than using the clock excuse the refs should have just admit it was an inadvertent whistle and said "sorry, we screwed up, this is how the rules require we handle it."
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DvovwlYUUAAMxmK.jpg
Think it falls under c although I’m not positive. And if it fall under C it goes to the possession arrow.
MullinMayhem wrote:To be totally honest though Mullin is not a coach and never will be. This team will probably finish 9-9 or 10-8 at absolute best and miss the tournament. Fire Mullin, fire the refs, and start over...again.
The BIG EAST Conference has conducted a thorough review of the final 3.9 seconds of the St. John’s at Seton Hall men’s basketball game played on December 29. The official has confirmed to the Conference Office that he stopped play based on a perceived delay in the activation of the game clock following an inbounds pass by Seton Hall. This was a non-correctable judgment call that we have determined was an error in judgment by the official. Once the judgment call was made, however, the application and administration of all NCAA rules were handled correctly by the officials for the duration of the game. These included the following:
A video review on the basis of a timing error. NCAA rules do not permit officials to make assessments or provide rulings on other components of the play.
Possession of the ball being given to Seton Hall.
A permissible substitution by Seton Hall.
In addition, there have been media reports and speculation regarding NCAA rules pertaining to “inadvertent whistles” and the role of the possession arrow in determining possession of the ball in this situation. To be clear, the whistle in this case was not inadvertent, but intentional. However, if there had been an inadvertent whistle, NCAA rules would have awarded possession to Seton Hall (Rule 6-4.1.g.).
BIG EAST officials, who are among the most capable in college basketball, are held to the highest standards and are rigorously evaluated on play-calling and application of rules. The Conference Office remains committed to ensuring that our games are officiated in a manner commensurate with the high level of competition in our league and the intensity displayed by all of our member programs.
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