knoxville news
knoxville news knoxville advertising entertainment knoxville obituaries rss linkedin twitter facebook contact smoky mountains knoxville legal notices knoxville classifieds travel knoxville sports business lifestyle knoxville daily sun
menu 2 knoxville food and restaurants about knoxville daily sun knoxville things to do
 
 
athletic support by eli cranor Athletic Support: Replays slowing basketball down
eli.cranor@gmail.com
April 3, 2022

Eli Cranor is a former professional quarterback and coach turned award-winning author. Please use the “Contact” page at elicranor.com to send in questions for “Athletic Support.”

Dear Athletic Support: Like everybody else, me and my wife have been watching a bunch of college basketball over the last few weeks. Our kids are grown with kids of their own now. The grandkids aren’t old enough to play organized sports yet. So if this question comes off as silly, please excuse me. But here’s the thing — I can’t stand all these slow-motion replays. Lord. They slow the game down something awful. And it seems like every game I watch, the more replays there are. What is this about? What ever happened to just making a call and sticking with it? Seems like the last three minutes of any of these tournament games winds up taking thirty minutes or more. My biggest question, though, is whether or not they do this stuff in high school ball. If so, I’m dreading the days when my grandkids are old enough to play!

— Speed It Up

Dear Speed: Instant replay technology isn’t used for high school basketball games in most states, and I think that’s a good thing.

High school sports are different from college. There’s still an innocence left to the game, or at least there should be.

Besides, all of that equipment is expensive. In order to get proper shots/angles, there has to be a lot of cameras in the gym.

Most high schools simply don’t have the funds or resources needed in order to have instant replay.

The referees raise another question.

High school refs for any sport are quickly becoming a dying breed. They’re underpaid and over criticized. Honestly, what kind of person actually wants to be a high school ref?

Luckily, there are some guys and girls devoted enough to don the stripes and whistle. Because without referees, there wouldn’t be high school sports at all.

Back when I was coaching, I think we paid refs somewhere right around seventy-five bucks per varsity football game. The junior high games earned even less.

If a state’s activity association were to try and implement instant replay technology, that would mean even more training for an already over-worked position.

What I’m saying here is that the refs would have to actually know how to work those cameras. Which sounds like a recipe for disaster to me. I’m not saying they couldn’t do it. I’m just saying learning to do it could make their job even harder.

Long story short, I don’t think you have much to worry about here. Money for cameras and lack of time for refs will most likely keep instant replay technology out of high school sports for a good long while.



Previous columns:

Did you write a football novel?
Dads stacking teams causing problems
When’s a good time to talk, Coach?
Cat’s in the cradle
Calling it quits after that halftime show
I won’t watch the Olympics
Pickup games causing trouble in neighborhood
Do coaches still cut kids from teams?
Son falling behind, again
Forced to play on fractured ankle
It’s not about winning in seventh grade
Daughter can’t keep weight-loss resolution
The Polish Goal Line Tactic
Is dance a sport?


Athletic Support Columns 2021
Athletic Support Columns 2020


Outside of athletics, kids’ brains are also at risk. Who knows what sort of impact virtual learning will have on their cognition and critical thinking skills. In this regard, I offer one simple tool — a good book! And luckily, I know just the book for kids struggling with the shift to virtual learning:

  BOOKS MAKE BRAINZ TASTE BAD!

books make brainz taste badOkay, you caught me… I’m the author of this book. It was published last week and awarded a #1 New Release ranking on Amazon. BMBTB deals directly with the same topic covered in this column, except in a much more lighthearted, kid-friendly way (zombie teachers and brain-munching screens!)

If you end up purchasing this book for your children or grandchildren, I only have one final suggestion — ask them to read it while standing up!

Eli Cranor's new book Books Make Brainz Taste Bad has just been released. ZOMBIES HATE BOOKS! Especially the zombie teachers at Haven Middle School. That's why they're using VR headsets to fry kids' brainz. Luckily, Dash Storey knows how to save his classmates from the zombie teachers—BOOKS! They make brainz taste bad!

"Eli Cranor has an almost unbeatable advantage. He can remember how it felt to think like a twelve-year-old and he can see the very same events like the adult he is. Don't try to resist this book!"
- Jack Butler, Pulitzer-Prize nominated author


dont know toughEli has a new book coming out March 8th. Don't Know Tough is a football-themed thrilled reminiscent of Friday Night Lights. The book is published by Penguin Random House and is available on Amazon.com.
 

 
















knoxville daily sun Knoxville Daily Sun
2022 Image Builders
User Agreement | Privacy Policy