Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac
Here's the explicit qualifying statement, the ending statement of the original post's description the situation: "but the ball touches the floor on the dribble in the backcourt". That's how the description ends.
Are you saying that me stating that he ball has to return to the hand for this to be a violation is not a valid point to make in situations (written test, or real life game) like this?
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I will say it regarding
situations like this.
You quoted it as "the ball touches the floor on the dribble in the backcourt."
"On the dribble" is the key phrase for me. If it did not return to the hand, then it would not be a dribble. To me that sounds far more logical than your point.
Love you BM.