Quote:
Originally posted by bob jenkins
Quote:
Originally posted by Nevadaref
#2 I agree with Camron. It's a violation, since the ball was fumbled. FC status is gained when it bounces in the FC. The first touch constitutes a change to BC status and thus a violation.
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FED 2000-2001 Interps.
Situation 1: A1 is straddling the line after catching and possessing a pass from A2. A1 then funmbles the ball, so that the ball lands in A's frontcourt. A1 then regains possession of the ball (still straddling the division line). Ruling: Violation (ote: I summarized the ruling, and this IS NOT the play being discussed in this thread.)
Situation 2: (Note: This IS the play being discussed in this thread) Same situation as above, except A1 begins a dribble immediately upon fumbling the ball and retreats to his / her backcourt to avoid a defender. Ruling: During a dribble from backcourt to frontcourt, the ball is in the frontcourt when the ball and both feet of the dribbler touch the court entirely in the frontcourt. Therefore, the play is legal and play continues.
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So, am I reading this correctly, that the starting of the dribble "beats" the touch/posession and therefore the violation mentioned in Sitch 1? I would've guessed once the ball touches the front court, then touches the player, it would be a violation, even though that touch involves starting a dribble. If the player picks up the ball after the fumble, then starts a dribble, I can see that being a violation. What about this - say the player fumbles it, the ball touches the front court, then the ball hits the player's leg on the way up, and the player immediately starts a dribble? Would that be a violation? How does the start of the dribble happen before the touch?