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				 Trent??? 
 
			
			There was a play that happen in the NBA in the mid-80s,  where a NY Knick player made a shot with .7 seconds on the clock,  against the Chicago Bulls to win the game.  The NBA was the first to make a rule that you could not "catch and shoot" with a certain amount on the clock.  I think there original rule was .7 seconds,  like our current .3 seconds rule.  They might have changed it later,  but that is where the .7 comes from.  I cannot think of the player that hit this "famous" shot that changed everything.  But on replay and with a clock,  you could tell the clock was not started properly and this brought on the change.  Also,  tenths of a second was very new at that time as well.  Before there was no need for this kind of rule in theory.  Now you would be hard pressed to find a scoreboard that does not have tenths of a second on it. 
 Peace
 
				__________________Let us get into "Good Trouble."
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 Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010)
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