JCP201
VFL GIRL, better or worse.
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I just noticed on this video that McRae had moved to the right of Stokes and when Stokes started his drive and the other defender doubled up on him that it looked like Stokes was going to pass out to McRae who was not covered but the ball got knocked loose (before the so-called "charge" call). Stokes was looking in the direction of McRae. Too bad he didn't get the ball to McRae.
I agree that it might have technically been the right call. But wasn't the right time to call it. I'm all for letting the players play in that spot. Nobody wants to watch the refs call something like that with 6 seconds to go.
Still a great game by the team. I'm proud of their effort.
"phantom contact" he did touch him but the guy anticipated the move and was bracing to fall back before any actual contact... IMO of course.
I just noticed on this video that McRae had moved to the right of Stokes and when Stokes started his drive and the other defender doubled up on him that it looked like Stokes was going to pass out to McRae who was not covered but the ball got knocked loose (before the so-called "charge" call). Stokes was looking in the direction of McRae. Too bad he didn't get the ball to McRae.
You're absolutely correct. He was trying to pass the ball to McRae. Look at the baseline slo-mo video. If the defender had been half a second later with the hands, Stokes would have passed the ball to McRae. The ending could have been totally different.
Jordan Morgan, who scored 15 points, heeded his coach's advice and stood his ground until Stokes lowered his shoulder. The senior forward immediately crashed to the floor -- perhaps embellishing the contact -- but drawing the call that saved the game for Michigan and infuriated Tennessee's "Rocky Top" contingent.
"With the magnitude of this game, I don't think you could call a charge at that point," McRae said dejectedly after scoring 24 points.
"I don't think I fouled him," said Stokes, who had 11 points and six rebounds after two straight double-doubles. "But it was a smart play for him to try to take the charge. He pretty much anticipated it."
Yes. You don't call that with the game on the line. Only if he is flying down the lane out of control, not on a simple drop step. Stokes did not even hit him squarely with his shoulder, more of the back.
Spot on. In slow motion, his legs are folding like a card table before contact. Balls ascended like a scared turtle and he took a dishonorable way to victory, IMO. Yes, I know that was harsh. Yes, I would probably feel different if a TN player did it, so I'm probably a hypocrite.
Yep, as the ball is knocked free, Stokes motion without the ball was to McRae, who would have taken the jumper or driven the lane. That was probably how Cuonzo drew it up, which is why Stokes was anticipating it.
That, it would have been.
Tennessee Volunteers vs. Michigan Wolverines - NCAA Tournament Game - Recap - March 28, 2014 - ESPN
Quotes from the preceding link:
