Thu Jun 03, 2021, 02:56pm
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Official Forum Member
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 15,004
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
There answer is just wrong...and they even give the reason that makes their own answer wrong. They reference 4.44.4b.
If the result is to be the same whether we regard it as a try or not a try and just a thrown ball, that means 4.41.4b, even though the situation references a try, must be the same if it is not a try...and it is 2 points.
Therefore, this play can't be a 3. To understand this play, you have to look for what is different between 4.41.4b and 5.2.1c that is not related to it being a try or not. The difference...in 4.41.4b the throw/try is short and obviously can't go in without a new bat by the defense. That is the fundamental difference and is why this is a 2.
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Agreed. IAABO screwed up again and got this one wrong. They will probably issue a retraction and correction in a few days. Just sad.
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