The "NEW" College basketball is terrible

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Rx Senior
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I can barely stand watching a game anymore. They got what they wanted out of the new rules, high scoring games but at what cost. Is the game even remotely the same anymore? How much longer is the average game now compared to last year? CBB can't be happy with the product they have created can they?
 

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I can barely stand watching a game anymore. They got what they wanted out of the new rules, high scoring games but at what cost. Is the game even remotely the same anymore? How much longer is the average game now compared to last year? CBB can't be happy with the product they have created can they?


Longer games = more commercials?
 

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​what is so different?
 

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It's unbearable. So many great matchups also being ruined by these new rules.
 

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It's unbearable. So many great matchups also being ruined by these new rules.

Former Arizona head coach and Hall of Famer Lute Olson has formally joined the group of coaches who have expressed their displeasure with the new rule changes this season in college basketball.


Hand-checking rules were changed this season to allow more player movement, which in return has increased scoring something that was down from a season ago. Although John Adams, the NCAA’s men’s basketball national officiating coordinator, told USA Today he believes the rules help the game become more graceful, Olson told Eric Prisbell that it hurts the rhythm of the games for teams.


“Frankly, I really don’t like it that much,” Olson said. “I think it takes teams out of their rhythm,” Olson told USA Today by phone. ”It seems like there is a whistle stopping play so many times. I can understand if they are arm-barring a kid and keeping him from where he wants to go.


“I just hope we can get back to some common sense and let the kids play more and let the fans enjoy the game,” Olson later added. “For the kids, it has to be frustrating, you have your hands straight up in the air and if the offensive player jumps into you, 90 percent of the time I think it is going to be called a block. I don’t think it’s good for the game, frankly.”


A week ago, Tom Izzo, head coach of the nation’s top-ranked team, voiced his opinion on the rule changes following a win against Oklahoma in the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic in Brooklyn.


It’s three days into the second month of the season and this ongoing battle between coaches — both current and former — and the rule changes is only heating up............
 

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Welcome to NCAA basketball 2013-14.



All this fuss is actually a good thing.


According to the NCAA basketball lords, the game too closely resembled a brawling, mugging, wrestling-like cage fight. So they decided to attempt to return basketball to its roots, giving shooters and dribblers the opportunity to ply their art.


And that's a good thing.


To see how far college basketball had degraded, you had to look no further than the sophomore season of BYU’s Tyler Haws. Somewhere along the road to being the WCC’s leading scorer and an NCAA top 10 scorer last season, opponents decided the best way to slow down or stop Haws was to basically try and dismember him, bruise his kidneys, hack his arms, elbow him in the face, and grab him when he tried to use a screen or pick. This was under the guise of “getting physical” on defense.


It took a toll on Haws. On one occasion, the mild-mannered former LDS missionary to the Philippines even reacted and earned a technical foul.


"This is as big of an adjustment for the game as we've seen, and that includes the clock and the 3-point line," Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said at Big 12 media day.


Last year, college basketball scoring had slowed down to its lowest level since 1952.


Back in the day, if you put your hands on another basketball player, you would be called for a foul. If you pushed the guy with your hands or with your forearm, used him as a bar, rode him around the key with your hands on his back or hip, engaged in hand checking or bumped cutters running through the key, it was a foul.


Somewhere during the past three decades, that interpretation of the rules was ignored. Now it is once again emphasized.


Simple as that.


In Appendix III of the NCAA basketball rule book, it specifically describes illegal activity to a dribbler as “The defender places a hand (front or back of the hand) on the ball-handler/dribbler and keeps it on.”

It is also illegal if, “The defender contacts the ball-handler/dribbler more than once with the same hand or with alternating hands.

A foul should be called if, “The defender contacts the ball-handler with an arm-bar.”

And it is a foul if, “Any displacement, holding or pushing occurs by either the offense or defense.”


A lot of such activity has not only been tolerated, but has been a staple of college basketball for years. If the system pulls it off, those things will no longer be part of the game.


Now, what does it mean?


On a positive note, there will be more scoring. Not a ton more, but slightly more across the board. In a negative vein, there will be more fouls called and in some cases, it could be a whistle marathon, interrupting the flow of the game as star players find themselves on the bench in foul trouble.


But this could be short term as players and officials adjust to the emphasis. The NBA made a similar emphasis in 1994, eliminating hand checking. Then in 1997, use of the arm bars started to be called. In the pros, teams are scoring more and fouling less. But it took time.


Before the season, many coaches were howling. They did not like it. In a game between Dayton and Findley, the two teams combined for 96 free-throw attempts.


But isn’t that obscene number a matter of education? Players were fouling. As this season progresses, everyone will adjust. And artistic shooters will surface with their craft.


Colorado State’s Larry Eustachy told reporters if folks paid to see Celine Dion in Vegas, she shouldn’t foul out before halftime. USA Today quoted West Virginia’s Bob Huggins and many others across the country saying it bugged them. “It stinks,” is how Xavier coach Chris Mack put it.


Let’s face it. College coaches are the ones that designed defenses to basically send out bully attacks and hack machines — then play that style if officials allowed it to pass. They did. But no longer.......


I agree with ESPN basketball analyst Jay Bilas: “The NFL has changed their game with regard to chucking receivers and putting your hands all over receivers. The NBA fixed their game. The NHL fixed their game. And we're way behind. And now we're fixing ours. And it is going to make the game so much better.”


In my opinion, it will be disruptive to the viewer and player for a while, then we’ll all get back to trying to make it a non contact sport, as it was designed to be
 
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I think (hoping) that we will take some lumps now but the end result will be better basketball.. Certain teams literally fouled every possession last year (Louisville). Game needed to be cleaned up.
 

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Agree, it has been pretty brutal to watch so far. While more fouls are being called, you have to watch these kids brick more & more FT's. It is awful.
 

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Call traveling to slow down the dribbling player and the player catching a pass on the move.
 

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Call traveling to slow down the dribbling player and the player catching a pass on the move.

agree, easy1-2-3 is a travel if we are to bring as it was designed to be!
 

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