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Old Sun Apr 15, 2018, 08:42pm
ilyazhito ilyazhito is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac View Post
Ralph Sampson’s (Virginia 1979-1983, NBA 1983-1995) controversial basket against Brigham Young in the 1981 NCAA tournament prompted an NCAA rule change. The seven foot, four inch, Virginia Cavalier All-American center dunked the ball with his free hand braced against the backboard. The basket led to a five point swing for Virginia, which capitalized on a technical foul against Brigham Young's Danny Ainge, who thought Sampson's play was illegal. Actually Sampson did nothing wrong, since, at the time, there was no rule making this an illegal play. Since 1983, NFHS rules now state that it’s illegal for player to place a hand on the backboard, or the ring, to gain an advantage.

Darryl Dawkins (NBA 1975-2000), the Philadelphia 76ers six foot, eleven inch, 251 pound center, in a game against the Kansas City Kings at Municipal Auditorium on November 13, 1979, dunked and broke the backboard, sending the King’s Bill Robinzine ducking away. Three weeks later he did it again, this time at home against the San Antonio Spurs at the Spectrum. Thus, Dawkins became famous for his backboard shattering dunks and is credited for being the player to cause the NBA to introduce breakaway rims. Breakaway rims are now an essential element of the game of basketball. A broken backboard, or distorted rim, could delay a game for hours. In 1981, the NFHS adopted specifications for breakaway rims.

Shaquille O'Neal (LSU 1989-1992, NBA 1992-2011) a seven foot, one inch, 325 pound center, was one of the heaviest players ever to play in the NBA. O'Neal dunked with so much power that he broke the steel supports holding backboards during games against the New Jersey Nets, and the Phoenix Suns, while playing for the Orlando Magic during the 1992–93 NBA season. This prompted the NBA to increase the strength and stability of the backboard supports, and change the stanchion design, for the following 1993–94 season. The NFHS added backboard support specifications to the rules in 1996-97.

In high school basketball, the “Trent Tucker Rule” disallows any "catch and shoot" shot taken on the court if the ball is put into play with three-tenths of a second or less left in the period. The rule was born out of an NBA game between the New York Knicks and the Chicago Bulls on January 15, 1990, at Madison Square Garden. The game was tied at 106 with one-tenth of a second left in regulation and the Knicks in possession. During a timeout called by the Knicks, both teams prepared for what was seen as the only possible way the Knicks could win in regulation, an alley-oop and tip in by Patrick Ewing from an out of bounds pass. When play resumed, the inbounding Knicks player, Mark Jackson, saw the alley-oop play get broken up. He proceeded to throw the ball inbounds to Trent Tucker (Minnesota 1978-1982, NBA 1982-1993), who was the only Knicks player open. Tucker then turned around and hit a three-point jump shot before the buzzer, giving the Knicks the win, 109-106. Replays showed that the clock had not started until Tucker's shot was already in flight. Afterward, it was determined that a player could not catch, and release, a shot that quickly. In 1995, the NFHS declared that a ball put into play with three-tenths of a second or less left in the period could only be scored on a tip in.

Patrick Ewing (Georgetown 1981-1985, NBA 1985-2002), a Georgetown Hoya All-American center, made wearing an undershirt under a game jersey popular. Ewing stated, “I wasn’t the originator, I was just the one who made it popular. There’s [sic] a lot of people who have done it before me but the difference is in my era, that’s when TV really got big. We were always on TV. The reason why I wore it was we started playing in these big arenas and it was always cold (Ewing was born in Kingston, Jamaica), especially when you have the ice down (under the basketball court) for hockey games. I was always complaining I was cold. I started wearing one and it became a fashion statement”. In 1984, the NFHS ruled that undershirts must be similar in color to the uniform jersey.

Karl Malone (Louisiana Tech 1982-1985, NBA 1985-2004), and Hakeem Olajuwon (Houston 1981-1984, NBA 1984-2002), both endorsed LA Gear basketball shoes. In 1993, they both wore LA Gear shoes with flashing lights in NBA games, Malone as a player on the Utah Jazz, and Olajuwon as a player on the Houston Rockets. The NBA, almost immediately, and later the NFHS, banned shoes with flashing lights.

Allen Iverson (Georgetown 1994-1996, NBA 1996-2011) began using an arm sleeve during the 2000-01 NBA season. Iverson’s shooting elbow had developed bursitis, an injury that would ultimately require surgery, Lenny Currier, then the trainer of the Philadelphia 76ers, cut a swath of a tube bandage and suggested that Iverson try to play with the bandage on his elbow. On January 21, 2001, took the court with a tube bandage stretched over his right arm. He scored fifty-one points that night, averaged more than thirty-five points per game for the rest of the season, and brought the 76ers to the NBA finals. He wore an arm sleeve for the rest of his career. A few months after Iverson debuted the tube bandage on his arm, Under Armour contacted Currier and asked if Iverson might try on a nylon sleeve they had made especially for him. Currier stated, “Their version was longer and came in red, blue, black, and white, so that it could match whatever uniform we were wearing that night. Once the other players started seeing him wearing it, they all followed his lead”. Players believed the mild compression the arm sleeves provide helps keep their shooting arms warm and improves circulation. Medical necessity quickly turned into a fashion accessory. Since then, the NFHS has ruled that arm sleeves (as well as other types of equipment) fall under color restrictions, shall be the same color as worn by each player, and shall be the same color for all members of a team who choose to wear them.

Skylar Diggins (Notre Dame 2009-2013, WNBA 2013-Present), as an All-American point guard for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, popularized knotted headbands with long loose ends. In 2015, the NFHS ruled that headbands must be without extensions.
That is so cool! Maybe the Trent Tucker Rule influenced the current NCAA rule that at least 0.3 must expire on a throw-in that is legally touched on the court inbounds.

If compression sleeves, undershirts, backboard specifications, and headband rules can be adopted from other levels, maybe the shot clock will have a chance nationwide (now, it is only present in 8 states, DC, Minnesota on a limited basis, and private school games on a case-by-case basis).
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