“Disrespect” toward officials can now result in automatic suspension

The language of what “disrespect” means is unclear. Shouldn’t be a problem often, but if becomes one, yikes.

A number of rules changes are coming to college basketball next academic year, 2024-25.

Primarily, the changes focus on the safety of in-game officials and the expansion of video replay. The latter change is expected to extend game times.

The expansion of video replay was approved for certain circumstances. Specifically, officials can now check if a player’s foot last touching the court was inbounds on a made shot before the clock expired.

Suspensions can now be handed out to players, coaches and bench personnel for threatening actions toward officials. The wording of the new rule is specific. One who “disrespectfully contacts an official or makes a threat of physical intimidation or harm, to include pushing, shoving, spitting or attempting to make physical contact with an official” will be ejected automatically. A one-game suspension will automatically follow, as well.

For the NIT next year, if the board at the NIT approves, coaches will be able to appeal out-of-bounds calls for video review in the final two minutes per game. A failed review would result in a lost timeout for the team that asked for the appeal. This change makes the game more like the NBA, where coaches are allowed two challenges per game.

Finally, in the women’s game, officials will go to video replay when an off-ball foul happens simultaneously to a field-goal or free-throw attempt. The goal is to check which happened first to provide more clarity.