Quote:
Originally posted by rainmaker
Quote:
Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:
Originally posted by Lotto
That's because a foul by an airborne shooter in NCAAM is not PC.
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Aww, that was hardly any fun at all. Lotto knew what I was getting at right away. (Guess I shoulda used an analogy.) My point was simply that in any ruleset, if there's a PC foul, the basket can't be scored. In NCAA men's, if the shot is released before the contact, then there is no player control and it's a common foul against the player who shot the ball. So no PC foul in this sitch.
But if it is a PC foul, then no basket can be scored.
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This means an airborne shooter after the shot is away, correct? (Not that it matters, since I'll never do NCAAM anyway...)
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Before the shot is away (ie he released the ball on a try) he's simply an airborne player, not an airborne shooter, by definition.