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Old Thu Jan 13, 2005, 01:56pm
blindzebra blindzebra is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by ChuckElias
Quote:
Originally posted by blindzebra
6-7-5 exception The ball does not become dead on an official's whistle UNTIL THE TRY ENDS.
I know that. But technically, there's no team control when the try ends, even if it goes in. That's the whole point. There's no team control at the "point of interruption", for lack of a better term. So how do we justify not going to the arrow? We have an inadvertant whistle with no team control. I don't know of any exception in the FED book that says "give it to the team that would have gotten control if the whistle hadn't blown". Is there such an exception?
It's called common sense.

If we have an inadvertant whistle, after the release 6-7-5-E allows for the shot to count, would that not LOGICALLY move the c) during a try, to d) after a made goal?

If not one team, depending on the arrow, is losing the ball they should be getting like after any other made basket.



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