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In this Clinician’s Corner, the focus was on the small details that separate “solid” from truly sharp officiating — especially in end-of-period situations and administrative moments that can quietly swing a game. The crew emphasized mechanical discipline: confirming 2 vs. 3, holding signals an extra beat, and always completing the full sequence (stop the clock → signal → strong direction → proper spot). We also hit a sneaky area that often gets missed — throw-in violations where a player steps out and illegally tosses the ball to a teammate. Add in reminders to use your voice on held balls and scrums, acknowledge sportsmanship when players help each other up, and stay aware of the bonus, and you get a masterclass in presence and clarity. 🎯
The second half zoomed in on the presentation layer — signals, posture, cadence, and crew awareness. Key reminders included: avoid marginal whistles while rotating unless it’s obvious; stay open and never officiate looking over your shoulder; eliminate excess signals on the spot (save block/charge mechanics for true B/C plays and “two shots” for real tweeners); and clean up table work by running or jogging in, planting, then reporting. We also covered high-value micro-fixes: straighten hand counts, tuck fingers (no loose pinkies), don’t point around your body on timeouts, avoid pointing at boundary lines on OOB, and use non-verbal communication (nods, eye contact) to give calls to your partner without creating visual confusion. The overall theme was simple: confidence shows up in the snap, the stop, the posture, and the polish 💪🏀 — capped off with a great cameo from Roger Ayers, sharing perspective from his Final Four experience and what true crew trust and preparation really look like at the highest level.
⛺️https://stan.store/crownrefs/p/crown-refs-skill-development-camp-tmq5jdse
🏀Join our Community @patreon.com/crownrefs
By Paul Diasparra4.8
126126 ratings
In this Clinician’s Corner, the focus was on the small details that separate “solid” from truly sharp officiating — especially in end-of-period situations and administrative moments that can quietly swing a game. The crew emphasized mechanical discipline: confirming 2 vs. 3, holding signals an extra beat, and always completing the full sequence (stop the clock → signal → strong direction → proper spot). We also hit a sneaky area that often gets missed — throw-in violations where a player steps out and illegally tosses the ball to a teammate. Add in reminders to use your voice on held balls and scrums, acknowledge sportsmanship when players help each other up, and stay aware of the bonus, and you get a masterclass in presence and clarity. 🎯
The second half zoomed in on the presentation layer — signals, posture, cadence, and crew awareness. Key reminders included: avoid marginal whistles while rotating unless it’s obvious; stay open and never officiate looking over your shoulder; eliminate excess signals on the spot (save block/charge mechanics for true B/C plays and “two shots” for real tweeners); and clean up table work by running or jogging in, planting, then reporting. We also covered high-value micro-fixes: straighten hand counts, tuck fingers (no loose pinkies), don’t point around your body on timeouts, avoid pointing at boundary lines on OOB, and use non-verbal communication (nods, eye contact) to give calls to your partner without creating visual confusion. The overall theme was simple: confidence shows up in the snap, the stop, the posture, and the polish 💪🏀 — capped off with a great cameo from Roger Ayers, sharing perspective from his Final Four experience and what true crew trust and preparation really look like at the highest level.
⛺️https://stan.store/crownrefs/p/crown-refs-skill-development-camp-tmq5jdse
🏀Join our Community @patreon.com/crownrefs

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