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Old Thu Jul 08, 2004, 09:46am
Dan_ref Dan_ref is offline
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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.
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.
This means an airborne shooter after the shot is away, correct? (Not that it matters, since I'll never do NCAAM anyway...)
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.
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