Sat Dec 03, 2022, 12:14pm
|
Official Forum Member
|
|
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 15,010
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by ilyazhito
It is not the same, because a ball hitting the backboard does not reset the shot clock. A ball hitting the ring does.
However, you have a point that IAABO screwed the pooch with #48. A ball hitting the ring is a try, therefore there is no team control when the ball hits the ring (in the frontcourt). Thus, because there is no team control, the ball can legally be touched by A in their backcourt after a try. Because the ball was recovered in the backcourt following a try, A gets a full reset of the shot clock and a new 10-second count.
|
Not correct. A pass which hits the ring is not a try. The official must deem that the player was throwing for goal. It is a judgment call.
|