Quote:
Originally Posted by bucky
The definition of a dribble excludes hitting the opponent's backboard (and official)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bob jenkins
Really? I'll have to look, but that isn't my understanding. Are you mixing up "opponent's basket" and "own basket"
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Basketball Rules Fundamentals
19. A ball which touches the front face or edges of the backboard is treated
the same as touching the floor inbounds, except that when the ball touches
the thrower’s backboard, it does not constitute a part of a dribble.
4-5-1: A team’s own basket is the one into which its players try to
throw or tap the ball.
4-15: A dribble is ball movement caused by a player in control who
bats (intentionally strikes the ball with the hand(s)) or pushes the ball to the
floor once or several times. It is not a part of a dribble when the ball
touches a player’s own backboard.
Unlike other sports where teams defend their "goal" (football, ice hockey, soccer, etc.), in basketball teams defend their opponent's "goal" and try to score in their "goal".
Perhaps Dr. Naismith's only mistake (other then inventing the jump ball).
Yeah Mark T. DeNucci, Sr., you heard me correctly. I said it. I know that James was one of your best friends, but the truth is the truth, and sometimes the truth hurts.