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Post by bison137 on Jun 5, 2019 13:44:11 GMT -5
Changes just adopted for the men's game:
1. The 3-point arc is moving to 22 feet, 1¾ inches from the hoop, as opposed to the current 20-9. The longer arc was used in the NIT this year and 3-point shooting pcts dropped from 35.2% to 33%. This new distance, btw, is the same as is used for international play.
2. When a team gets an offensive rebound, the shot clock will only reset to 20 seconds.
3. Coaches can now call live-ball timeouts in the final two minutes of the second half or of OT.
4. Replay may be used in the final two minutes of the second half or of OT when there is a question about a goaltending call.
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Post by hchoops on Jun 5, 2019 13:50:00 GMT -5
All Sensible
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Jun 5, 2019 15:15:17 GMT -5
I really like #2 and #3. As far as the three point arc goes, I'd move it out to 75 feet even...……
This should help HC as we grabbed 220 offensive rebounds versus 342 for our opponents
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Post by bringbackcaro on Jun 5, 2019 22:21:53 GMT -5
I don’t understand #2. It makes the job of the defense easier when it is their fault for not getting the first rebound.
And I am firmly against anything that brings the shot clock closer to the NBA, which has become a completely unwatchable brand of basketball for someone who is not interested in a 1-on-1 jump shooting contest. College Basketball would be far better off embracing what makes it different from this current NBA product and what has made it great for so long.
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Jun 5, 2019 22:24:24 GMT -5
I don’t understand #2. It makes the job of the defense easier when it is their fault for not getting the first rebound. And I am firmly against anything that brings the shot clock closer to the NBA, which has become a completely unwatchable brand of basketball for someone who is not interested in a 1-on-1 jump shooting contest. College Basketball would be far better off embracing what makes it different from this current NBA product and what has made it great for so long. Perhaps on #2 the idea is the offense does not need to be allocated 10 seconds to get the ball across the half court line as applies when taking the ball out at the other end of the court.
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Post by bison137 on Jun 6, 2019 0:23:06 GMT -5
I don’t understand #2. It makes the job of the defense easier when it is their fault for not getting the first rebound. And I am firmly against anything that brings the shot clock closer to the NBA, which has become a completely unwatchable brand of basketball for someone who is not interested in a 1-on-1 jump shooting contest. College Basketball would be far better off embracing what makes it different from this current NBA product and what has made it great for so long. Perhaps on #2 the idea is the offense does not need to be allocated 10 seconds to get the ball across the half court line as applies when taking the ball out at the other end of the court. That is exactly the idea, as stated by the NCAA rules committee that proposed this rule change. In a way, this is an extension of the way the rule is applied when the defense kicks a ball. In that case, the shot clock is only set back to 20 seconds if it occurs in front court.
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Post by timholycross on Jun 6, 2019 13:20:15 GMT -5
I don’t understand #2. It makes the job of the defense easier when it is their fault for not getting the first rebound. And I am firmly against anything that brings the shot clock closer to the NBA, which has become a completely unwatchable brand of basketball for someone who is not interested in a 1-on-1 jump shooting contest. College Basketball would be far better off embracing what makes it different from this current NBA product and what has made it great for so long. I guess it's a sign of how bad HCs zone is in many games that it doesn't help to have a shorter clock. The 30 second clock was supposed to help zones (compared to the old 35); Boeheim was jumping for joy when the changed the rule. The one rule I don't ever want to see in men's basketball is the free 60 foot advance of the ball at the end of a game after a time out.
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