Quote:
Originally posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr.
I am not sure why the NCAA Women's issued an interpretation regarding this play, but there is a NFHS Casebook Play that has been around for years (I think that the NFHS Casebook Play dates back to the NBCofUS&C, therefore is applicable under NFHS and NCAA Men's/Women's rules) and it states that if B1 commits a free throw violation and the Team A requests and is granted a timeout prior to A1 releasing the free throw, B1's violation is still in effect when A1 has the ball placed at his disposable for the free throw after the timeout is over. The covering official shows the delayed dead ball signal. If A1 misses, he receives a substitute free throw.
MTD, Sr.
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Mark,
I should know better than to question you but some of our officials who took the state certification test this year said this was a question on the test and the test answer was no the violation does not carry over. The interpretation they were given was that when you grant the TO you make the ball dead. According to the rules the free throw ends on a dead ball. The TO call ended the free throw so after the TO the free throw is a completely new one the violation can not carry over. I won't argue your expertise or a case book play. I'm just telling you what I was told by some of our veterans taking a state test.