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Clockgate II -- How the Other Gender Handles It

(Guru's Note: In light of recent "events" in Knoxville, this is how the Big Sky handled a men's situation on Monday also involving errors by officials and the game clock at the end of regulation. This is straight off the AP wire, but the Guru believes it would enlighten the readership.)

Big Sky suspends three basketball officials

ASSOCIATED PRESS

HELENA, Mont. — The Big Sky Conference suspended three officials for their incorrect ruling in the Montana-Idaho State last weekend, commissioner Doug Fullerton said Monday.

Eric Curry, Bob Scofield and Scott Harris will be suspended for one game each.

In Sunday game at Pocatello, Idaho, the score was tied at 58 in the final second when a Montana player called for a timeout after securing a rebound.

According to a statement from the conference, television replays confirmed the timeout was recognized by the officials before the final horn.

The statement said Montana had used its allotment of timeouts and should have been called for a technical foul, awarding Idaho State two free throw attempts with time still on the clock.

After the technical foul shots, Montana should have taken possession, the statement said.

Instead, the officials ruled that the timeout was recognized simultaneously with the final horn.

Curry, the head official, made the incorrect call, said Jon Kasper, director of media relations for the Big Sky. However, the game was televised, so all three officials had the option to use replay to determine how much time remained when the timeout was recognized.

They chose not to review the play, and Montana went on to win the game 73-62 in overtime.

“We give officials great flexibility to interpret plays within the rules,” Fullerton said. “We never allow officials to set aside a rule. We’re not sure whether the game would have ended on the free throw line, but Idaho State should have been given that opportunity.”

Reached at his office in Minneapolis on Monday, Curry declined to comment.

The NCAA Men’s Basketball Rules Committee does not recognize or allow protests, so the outcome of the game will not change, the statement said.

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Authors

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Mel Greenberg covers college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he has worked for 38 years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

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Jonathan Tannenwald is a producer with Philly.com. In addition to covering the local college scene, he spent two years as the Washington Mystics beat writer for Women's Hoops Guru. He also writes his own blog, Soft Pretzel Logic, which covers men's college basketball, football, and a variety of other sports.

Other contributors

-- Erin Semagin Damio covers the University of Connecticut and the WNBA's Connecticut Sun for the blog, and contributes other features. The Storrs, Conn., native also attends Northeastern University, where she is a coxswain on the varsity crew team.

-- Acacia O'Connor is in her senior year at Vassar College, where she played on the school's varsity team before going abroad to Bologna, Italy, last spring. From Bologna, she wrote regular dispatches on basketball and culture.

To read the old version of Women's Hoops Guru, click here.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 25, 2008 10:23 PM.

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