SelectionSunday
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Still love college basketball, but it needs some major repairs. It's become borderline unwatchable at times, especially the last couple minutes of a 6-7-point game when it becomes a procession to the free-throw line and/or the review table for silly & minor clock adjustments. Quite often it completely ruins what had been great & entertaining games.
Here are a few of my suggestions. Others that you'd like to see?
(1) TV timeouts are 3 minutes each. That's too long. Because TV won't let them cut ad time, negotiate to make it 3 TV timeouts per half and make it four timeouts per team, per game (with one of them being a use it or lose it in the first half). That means a max of three timeouts per team in the second half. It's ludicrous for teams to have 4/5 timeouts remaining with less than 4 minutes to go in a game. And that happens all the time.
(2) Determine what a foul is and stick with it. Hand checking? Yes or no? Make a decision. Two hands on a offensive player has to be an automatic foul.
(3) Reset the team foul (bonus) count midway through each half. No more teams marching to the foul line 7 and 8 minutes into a half. It's no longer basketball. More like the Elks Club free throw shoot. When the clock reaches 10:00, the bonus clock automatically resets.
(4) Coaches should only be allowed to make dead-ball timeouts/make the players think for themselves. If the ball is live and the coach wants a timeout, he either has to get that message conveyed to one of his players, or the players (heaven forbid) should have to think for themselves and call the timeout on their own. Isn't that part of college life on & off the court, learning how to think independently? I am so sick of coaches being allowed to bail out their team by running & screaming toward the official like a madman and then getting rewarded with a timeout.
(5) Adopt an NHL-like embellishment technical and enforce it. Stop the flopping (Duke the masters) and snapping the neck back (OSU's DeAngelo Russell a good example) on the slightest of contact (for Example A flop, see Tyus Jones vs. Duje Dukan). Duke started & has mastered the art of the flop (see Wojo, Shane Battier, Greg Paulus video, etc.), and unfortunately a lot of college basketball programs have followed. There has to be a deterrent for overzealous embellishing.
Here are a few of my suggestions. Others that you'd like to see?
(1) TV timeouts are 3 minutes each. That's too long. Because TV won't let them cut ad time, negotiate to make it 3 TV timeouts per half and make it four timeouts per team, per game (with one of them being a use it or lose it in the first half). That means a max of three timeouts per team in the second half. It's ludicrous for teams to have 4/5 timeouts remaining with less than 4 minutes to go in a game. And that happens all the time.
(2) Determine what a foul is and stick with it. Hand checking? Yes or no? Make a decision. Two hands on a offensive player has to be an automatic foul.
(3) Reset the team foul (bonus) count midway through each half. No more teams marching to the foul line 7 and 8 minutes into a half. It's no longer basketball. More like the Elks Club free throw shoot. When the clock reaches 10:00, the bonus clock automatically resets.
(4) Coaches should only be allowed to make dead-ball timeouts/make the players think for themselves. If the ball is live and the coach wants a timeout, he either has to get that message conveyed to one of his players, or the players (heaven forbid) should have to think for themselves and call the timeout on their own. Isn't that part of college life on & off the court, learning how to think independently? I am so sick of coaches being allowed to bail out their team by running & screaming toward the official like a madman and then getting rewarded with a timeout.
(5) Adopt an NHL-like embellishment technical and enforce it. Stop the flopping (Duke the masters) and snapping the neck back (OSU's DeAngelo Russell a good example) on the slightest of contact (for Example A flop, see Tyus Jones vs. Duje Dukan). Duke started & has mastered the art of the flop (see Wojo, Shane Battier, Greg Paulus video, etc.), and unfortunately a lot of college basketball programs have followed. There has to be a deterrent for overzealous embellishing.