I think the flopping rule was designed to speed up the game, and all it did was slow it down. If you want to speed up the game, go to four quarters like every other organized basketball game.
Men's college basketball is the only organized basketball that still uses halves. I will disagree with you on the two shots for free throws. I love the one and one. I think only shooting fouls should be two shots. One-and-one would also speed up the time of the game. You miss the first free throw, and you are back to playing basketball. I know it will never happen, but that is my wish. I love the discussions.
https://www.kplctv.com/2021/08/04/mc...chool-history/
https://ragincajuns.com/news/2021/6/...enovation.aspx
Naming rights breakdown:
"Little Brother": $2.5 million over 10 years
"Big Brother": $15 million over 15 years
Last edited by zeppelincajun; December 16th, 2022 at 10:58 am. Reason: I'm a moron
That is exactly what happened, the only reason that McNeese got possession of the missed basket was because the player hit the floor and the whistle immediately blew and our player stopped moving. Again, if the player does not flop it is either a made basket a foul or the two player fight for position and see who gets the rebound. Once the whistle blew and the McNeese player hit the ground for no reason it changed the complexion of what was going to happen.
McNeese benefited from the call more than we benefited from it. It doesn't make any sense. I agree it should either be a two shot technical and possession back to the defensive team or 1 shot Technical and possession back to the offense.
Anything else is just not going to change a team from choosing to flop. Okay let me get this right, I flop you get 1 point and I have the immediate chance to get 2 or 3 points on the next possession. Win for the floppers.
I thought the flop occurred while our guy was moving to his left. That happened before the shot. The play shouldn't have counted and there shouldn't have been a rebound. I had turned off the sound at that point so I really didn't know what was going on. Just new the commentators we're bad so I wasn't gonna listen to there hot takes anyways
So I immediately knew what happened but the bozo's doing the commentating were lost. They kept saying, I am not sure what the call is or what is going on. Anyone with half a brain could see what the call was. The flop did occur before the shot, that is why I could not understand how McNeese got the ball back. I am not blaming McNeese or even the refs for this. I am more concerned that this is a rule that the NCAA needs to address and correct in the future.
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