Quote:
Originally posted by Slider
Quote:
Originally posted by Mark Dexter
As Mark T. DeNucci has shown in his posts about climbing on top of another player and then dunking, this is two T's. Whether I would actually assess two is another story (in NF - tossing a kid for this action
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Maybe shown to you, but not to me :-)
There are numerous instances in the rules where we only call the one part of a foul (the initial or the ultimate infraction).
For instance, during a live ball, A1 pushes B1, as the push is completed, A1 immediately follows up with a punch.
How many of you call two fouls?
If you wanted to divide time into little self-contained boxes, you could call two or more fouls on almost every foul.
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The answer to your question is a no brainer: There are a lot of us would call two fouls in your play. The pushing foul by A1 caused the ball to become dead. After the ball became dead, A1 decided to commit a flagrant technical foul.
I do not know if you could call two or more fouls on almost every foul, but yes you can divide time into little self-contained boxes, it is called discrete mathematics. As a structural engineer, physicsref will help me out here because the dividing of time into increments is more in his field and not mine.