The Columbus Dispatch

The age-old basketball question of when is a foul not a foul

- The Mailbox Brian White Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

Unfortunat­ely, we don’t have room in the print edition for all of the great reader feedback we’re getting. For more of the letters, go to Dispatch.com. Have more comments, questions? Reach out to me at bwhite1@dispatch.com. Letters are lightly edited for clarity.

On basketball officiatin­g

Hi Brian: Think about the illegal screen that was called against Uconn in the last seconds of the NCAA women's semifinal game. But first, take your team allegiance out of play, as well as the women/men considerat­ion, as well as the level of play. American basketball fans have come to believe that at the end of close games we should "let the players decide the outcome."

Do the referees actually believe that. Do they actually "swallow their whistles" at the end of close games; or is it all just a myth? I would like to believe that it is a myth, but in my 31 years of coaching high school basketball I have even had some game officials verbalize that philosophy. To "let the players decide the outcome" means that the action won't be called as closely as other times in the game.

Is that really what we want? I have a very close knowledge of NFHS basketball rules, and I have scoured NCAA basketball regulation­s and I have not seen any reference to calling the game differentl­y in the closing seconds of a tight contest. Oftentimes, the game ends with the result that would happen no matter what. But if not, who gets penalized? Most often it's the team that continues to play within the rules.

We need to get rid of the belief that we "let the players decide the outcome." A foul should be a foul no matter what time in the game it occurs- the first minute, middle of the third quarter, or the final 10 seconds of a close game. But again, it's the adults in the room that need to make that happen.

Officials are human, they sometimes miss a call- a bang/bang contact that could be a block or a charge, for example. We have to eliminate the idea that what was a foul in the third quarter is not a foul in the last 10 seconds of a close game. And we coaches and spectators have to expect that!

Al Summers, Pataskala

To Coach Al: Totally agree. As a former high school official, I never really understood when coaches argued that "You can't make that call at that point in the game." If that's the case, they should announce to the crowd that from a certain point in the game a travel might not be a travel anymore.

On the Fairground­s and high school basketball

To Brian: As you know, there's nothing like high school basketball, especially when you're in high school.

The Ohio High School Athletic Associatio­n records include scoring leaders who went on to play for Ohio State: Jon Diebler, Jay Burson, Jerry Lucas, Jim Jackson and Allan Hornyak. Tournament games at Ohio's (Taft) Fairground­s Coliseum have included the eventual state champion from several Columbus area schools. I recall games when the boxed energy from the raucous crowds in the regional finals could be so deafening, the officials had to use an air horn - an experience you never forget.

Many championsh­ip stars have long passed through the old "Barn" (1918): Jim Cleamons and coach Vince Chickerell­a of Linden-mckinley ('67); a host of talented starters from East ('66-'69) and their coach Bob Hart; Ed Stahl and coach Jackie Moore of Walnut Ridge. In the '70s when I was a ball boy, there was Newark and coach Gary Walters (27 years, state semifinals in 1981). I wonder if today's kids ever look back to those historical, memorable tournament­s teams, players and coaches. If what I've read is true, games could soon return to the Coliseum. A little subordinat­e, it's still a sports landmark in this town. Renovated in 2005, the 5,000-seat arena is the place to get "fired up."

Larry Cheek, Dublin

To Larry: I can pretty much guarantee

that today's kids know little about the history of area hoops. Or hoops in general. As in, who old men named Larry Bird and Kareem were.

On baseball no-hitters

Mr. White: Ronel Blanco of the Houston Astros authored this season's first no-hitter, the 17th in team history. For folks who feel that there are "too many" no-no's, there may be a way to sharply lessen these occurrence­s. Consider that Pittsburgh's Forbes Field was the home of the Pirates from 1909 through June 28, 1970. During that span of over 60 years and over 4,000 games, there was never a no-hitter pitched in that park. That's a large sample size! The Pirates' hitters won quite a number of batting titles, including those won by Honus Wagner and Roberto Clemente. Players such as the Waner brothers, Arky Vaughan, Max Carey, and Kiki Cuyler hit well over .300 scores of times.

Forbes Field had a spacious playing surface that was originally 365 feet down the lines and 462 feet to straightaw­ay center field. The Pirates moved to Three Rivers Stadium (a "cookie cutter" ballpark) in 1970 after departing Forbes Field. On Aug. 14, 1971, Bob Gibson hurled a no-hitter in Three Rivers.

Richard Zaborsky, Dublin

 ?? KEN BLAZE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Iowa forward Hannah Stuelke reacts against Connecticu­t in the semifinals of the Final Four on April 5.
KEN BLAZE/USA TODAY SPORTS Iowa forward Hannah Stuelke reacts against Connecticu­t in the semifinals of the Final Four on April 5.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States