mebanedeac
Well-known member
It appeared to me that Crawford would often take a couple steps before he dribbled. I expected him to be called for traveling, but he rarely was so I must have wrong.
Widen the lane. Unpack the paint. Problems solved
It's hardly surprising that a generation that doesn't like rules in general wouldn't like rules in basketball, either.
It's hardly surprising that a generation that doesn't like rules in general wouldn't like rules in basketball, either.
Right, that does happen. I now sit in the stands observing high school games for the local association and writing reports since I have had knee replacement. But I see, by far too many missed walk calls from the non-calling side. I might start a mark on the side of how many I see. It is hard enough for a defender to stop a quick offensive guy anyway, but give him the illegal dribbles they get now with palming or cupping, throw in some extra steps, maybe an illegal pick that is missed, and it is damn hard to stop that drive to the hole! Conversely, if an offensive guy is trying to come hard legally off a screen and the defender is able to stick an illegal hip, knee or elbow into him to know him off stride or on his ass, that makes it tough on the offense to run their play in 30 seconds.
It's pretty silly to say the the Big Ten is owning the tournament. If anyone, the Pac-12 and SEC are better positioned with better records than the Big Ten.
It's hardly surprising that a generation that doesn't like rules in general wouldn't like rules in basketball, either.
It's hardly surprising that a generation that doesn't like rules in general wouldn't like rules in basketball, either.
I now sit in the stands observing high school games for the local association and writing reports
oh how the mighty have fallen
It's pretty silly to say the the Big Ten is owning the tournament. If anyone, the Pac-12 and SEC are better positioned with better records than the Big Ten.