quote:
Originally posted by Brian Watson on 03-03-2000 02:33 PM
I dont have the book in front of me either but, causing a violation, does not establish team possession, (for example, B1 is standing on the base line and taps the ball out of A1s hand. Violation on B, but no team B possession). I would give B the ball with A getting the arrow. Its a tough call. Pop Quiz. Earlier in the year I had a tap go to an open spot on the floor with A and B diving simultaneously to the ball for a tie up. No possession and a tough call right away. We re-jumped the two girls who tied up, which I believe is the correct call. Any thoughts?
Well, you're correct that "causing a violation does not establish team posession", but we're talking about team posession being a violation (see the difference?).
In HS, B gets the ball, A gets the arrow. See case 6.3.1C(d) for the exact example.
You were right on your pop-quiz. Same case, play (c).