http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc ... /25466847/
Along with 30 second shot clock:
I would really like to see timeouts limited. TV timeouts plus what they're given ... ridiculous. Especially hate the TO right before the TV timeout. No TOs unless you possess the ball. Just made a bucket? You no longer have the ball. No TO. No subs between free throws. Gotta do something to speed reviews, too. The final two minutes are interminable. Flow horribly disrupted.— The rules committee will try to work with the National Association of Basketball Coaches about the number of timeouts in a game, and the long breaks that come with them. Belmont coach Rick Byrd, chairman of the men's basketball rules committee, said, "The flow of the game, the final two minutes … will be discussed."
— Adams, the outgoing head of officiating, said he believes officials like to call charges, but the mindset should be, if he's not sure the defender has met qualifications for one, he should call a block. That's not necessarily what's been happening.
— Adams said there are 38 fouls a game on average, and he thinks the sport could "live" with 45 or so a game if it would make the game better. Perhaps if officials call tighter fouls early, it could reduce contact overall, and teams would eventually adapt. There has been a general sentiment that if the rules were just officiated as they were written, that could help clean up physicality in the game, too.
— Hyland said a 4-foot restricted-area arc might cut down on block/charge calls — the toughest judgment call for officials.
— There will also be a discussion about the use of replays for judgment calls in light of the ending of UCLA-Southern Methodist in the NCAA tournament's Round of 64. The game ended on a controversial goaltending call. By current rule, because it was a judgment call it could not be reviewed.