Quote:
Originally posted by mick
C)gets the ball when both feet off the floor, then foot #1 back to floor, foot #1 off the floor, foot #2 back to floor, foot #2 off the floor, ball gone, foot(feet) back to floor. This is the land-jump-jump-shoot sequence, with alternate "footings".
D)gets the ball when both feet off the floor, then foot #1 back to floor, foot #1 off the floor, foot #1 back to floor again(!), foot #1 off the floor, ball gone, foot (feet) back to the floor. this is the land-jump-jump-shoot sequence, with the same footing.
Um, nope.
One red + one green does not equal two red + one green. 
mick
|
That is why I said "
in essence" they were the same.
in stead of landing simultaneously on both feet, the player lands on one foot only, then jumps right off to shoot. In this regard, C and D are the same.
Actually, C is not listed in the "prescribed limit" in NCAA either, right? But no one really questions C's legitimacy.
So what makes C a legal move in NCAA? Why can't it apply to D also?
Thanks.