Quote:
Originally posted by nine01c
[QUOTE
Can you call a violation on the defense for this? I know you can call a violation on the offense for it but on the defense wouldn't it have to be a foul, flagrant foul, or a no call?
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Since when does "swinging elbows" violation differ between offense and defense? If no contact = violation.
If there is contact = T foul. Doesn't matter which team commits the action. Reset the clock (this is NOT the same as a ball being batted out of bounds, which is not a violation, per se). [/B][/QUOTE]
1) If it's contact during a live ball, then it's a personal foul (might be intentional or flagrant), not a T.
2) "Causing the ball to go OOB" is a violation -- see 9- 3 (both FED and NCAA). It's just an "exception" to the shot-clock rule (NCAA 2-13.7a, instead of 2-13.6e)