rockyraccoon wrote:M0TIVAT0R wrote:wink wrote:What's amusing to me is that with all this hoopla I have never seen an official change his mind once he made a call regardless what a player or fan said and the only time I have ever seen the winner of a game reversed was when an ineligible player was discovered later on.
So what's it all worth?

Great post. All the screaming is meaningless as far as getting a call goes. All it does is detract from the game, and maybe cause some of the types of calls that all the fans on here seem to be complaining about in the first place.
I disagree, it let's the refs know you are watching what they are doing. That's why they call it "working the refs" in higher level play. A coach will rip a ref for blowing a call, in hopes that he will wake up and call the game better. Perfect point is the three second call. I heard an announcer in a college game once say the first three second call is usually about 5 or 6 seconds. Once it is complained about by the coach and fans, the refs start watching for it. I have saw that many times in high school ball.
I agree. Case in point, Ripley vs Fleming Co last night. At the beginning of the game, one of the Fleming Co players drove along the baseline to the basket and stepped out of bounds on the way. I was sitting three rows back and had a clear line of sight, not to mention catching it on video camera! The ref standing on the baseline wasn't even watching the action in front of him, he was staring down the court. We (the fans) let him have it. Later in the game, the same player tried the same tactic and AGAIN stepped out of bounds. THIS time-the ref was watching and called it correctly. It doesn't always work, but sometimes you can wake them up.
Having said that, we have an amazingly wide range of ability with our referees in this area. We've got several who go out and try their best with varying levels of success, but I can at least give them points for trying. We have some who are very skilled, and it's always a blessing to see them on the court. Then we have the others who are actively hostile, who hold grudges and are biased against the team or individual players before they ever walk on the court. We need a mechanism to get rid of that type of official-they have no business being on the court.