KP
Active Member
jay_christley said:"supposed to" being the key.
Well, that's a given.
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jay_christley said:"supposed to" being the key.
lone star scribe said:In Texas, if a stadium clock is available, it is the official time for a HS match, unless the referee has it shut off because of some malfunction. Refs always keep the time as a backup, because clocks can malfunction. (And if you look closely enough, you'll see that refs wear two watches. Can't be too careful.)![]()
Pastor said:I believe, based on all that I've read, it goes by the minute. So, based on 40' halves, the 35:40 of the second half would be the 76' mark.
Now, say a goal is scored in 2:20 of extra time, it wouldn't be listed as the 83' it would be listed as 80' (+3). And the same would be for the extra time of the first half 40' (+3).
Billy Pritchard said:I only hope they can recover from this tremendously harmful piece of misinformation.2muchcoffeeman said:Billy Pritchard said:Since most of the fields I cover prep soccer at have scoreboards, I always refer to the exact time of the goal.
At every prep soccer game I've ever covered, the official time is kept by the referee on the field, not by the scoreboard operator. So if you're putting the indicated time from the scoreboard in your story, you're giving your readers incorrect information.
Maybe I should start writing that "the scoreboard read 28:12 when the goal was scored." If you write it was scored in the 29th minute, how do you know that's accurate? Maybe it was in the 28th minute or 30th minute according to the officials.
2muchcoffeeman said:Billy Pritchard said:I only hope they can recover from this tremendously harmful piece of misinformation.2muchcoffeeman said:Billy Pritchard said:Since most of the fields I cover prep soccer at have scoreboards, I always refer to the exact time of the goal.
At every prep soccer game I've ever covered, the official time is kept by the referee on the field, not by the scoreboard operator. So if you're putting the indicated time from the scoreboard in your story, you're giving your readers incorrect information.
Maybe I should start writing that "the scoreboard read 28:12 when the goal was scored." If you write it was scored in the 29th minute, how do you know that's accurate? Maybe it was in the 28th minute or 30th minute according to the officials.
Digital watch with stopwatch mode. When I see the ref signal for a clock stoppage, or stop his clock, I stopped mine.
KP said:Kicksthesnotoutoftheball is a sophomore.
Smallpotatoes said:In Massachusetts, the referee keeps the time. If there's a scoreboard clock, it's unofficial and shut off with two minutes left in each half.