Is the ball palming rule different in NCAA than in high school? High-school rules require "momentary contact" to be legal.
What I'm seeing in the NCAA playoffs is dribblers bringing the ball downcourt, often with their dribbling hand down at about 5 O'Clock on the ball and the ball spinning in their hand before they turn it over and put it down again.
Also, I'm seeing NCAA dribblers trying to avoid the defense by carrying the ball roughly horizontally two or three feet and changing it's direction before putting it down on the floor again.
I'd certainly call some of this stuff palming or double dribble in high-school. Unfortunately kids watch this an then think it's OK. Last weekend I was officiating a 5th-grade tournament and their star dribbler was virtually down at 5 or 6-O'Clock under the spinning ball on every dribble - even after I called it several times.
I feel it gives the offense too much of an advantage. Is anyone else seeing this in the NCAA playoffs am I reading the rules too literally? Maybe I'm being too concered, since I come from a volleyball officiating background where "momentary contact" means exactly that!
|