Quote:
Originally Posted by OmniSpiker
Thanks,
I'd forgot to really clarify that the attacker, completes attack. Ball goes into opponent's legal block. The blocked ball rebounds back and hits attacker in the same jump while attacker is still reaching above top of net after completed attack. Just so there's no questioning of separate blocking action after completed attack.
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Yes. As strange a concept as it might seem, you can definitely have, for lack of a better description, a block of a block. A joust is the most common instance of this, but the scenario you described above certainly would qualify if the attacker was close enough to the net to become a blocker after the attack was completed/blocked.