Again, it's not the false double foul, I believe, that makes you go to the arrow. If it was a common foul by ONE player on the free-throw lane, then you'd have a one-and-one or ball OOB by the other team. It's the double-foul part that either goes to the arrow or the team that had possession. However, now that I've had a chance to look at the NCAA wording, it says that the team in possession of the ball for a THROW-IN when a double foul occurs gets the ball back without the AP arrow being used. So, since this double-foul occurs during a free-throw, I'd say it DOES in fact go to the arrow, as Dennis and Alaska Ref said to begin with. I just needed to have the REASON for that as the basis so I would know for sure.
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