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Old Tue Nov 29, 2005, 03:04pm
ChrisSportsFan ChrisSportsFan is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,592
Quote:
Originally posted by Dan_ref
Quote:
Originally posted by David M
Quote:
Originally posted by ChrisSportsFan
Quote:
Originally posted by Dan_ref
Quote:
Originally posted by ChrisSportsFan
Quote:
Originally posted by Texas Aggie
The play wasn't difficult, but I had to pause for a second and get with my partner.

Team A shooting second (of 2 or 1 and 1; don't recall) free throws. B41 steps into lane early and I (as the lead) have delayed dead ball signal. Free throw does not touch rim prompting my partner to call a violation (his whistle was before mine).

So, we get together and I ask if we had a held ball for simultaneous violations, but then realized it wasn't a simultaneous violation -- Team B committed a violation first; only the dead ball part was simultaneous. We reshoot the second shot.

Its just weird that I've never seen this before or given it any thought. That's why I'm posting it here.
Since you referred to your partner as a partner verses partners....why would both of you blow the whistle? It's the trail's call.
Why not?
See above....it's the trail's call in 2-man. Lead is watching rebounding. Trail is also but he has the angle to see the rim.
It depends on where B41 was.
What he said.

There is no rebounding while the L is watching for a lane violation. And when there is rebounding it's pretty much guaranteed to happen where the L is already looking.
There is 2 different comments going on here. One is about the lane violation/disconcertion and the other is about who blows the whistle on an airball freethrow. The airball freethrow is the trail's call.
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