Quote:
Originally Posted by SNIPERBBB
It would be a very good and extremely random trick for a player to step on or over the division line and get back off it being the space if a normal dribble.
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I seriously doubt that such a player would be able to intentionally "walk the tightrope" to purposely avoid a backcourt violation, but possibly could do it unintentionally, with a nearby official watching.
Of course, the supposedly offended coach will be yelling "backcourt!".
I wasn't officiating when the NFHS first added the 9-3-1-Note to the rulebook (it was already there when I started), so I am not aware of the purpose and intent of the note, but I would guess that it was added so that officials wouldn't have to keep track of rapid split second miniscule movements of both feet and hands in such situations where a dribbler is dribbling very close to a boundary.
Should that same purpose and intent apply to the division line for a backcourt violation?
If so, why didn't the NFHS include a similar note in the interpretation of a backcourt violation in regard to touching the division line with a foot while at the same time not touching the ball?