Quote:
Originally Posted by jmaellis
I trying to picture what is being described here. Did the inbounder put the spin on the ball, bounce it out of bounds (with the spin) and then the ball entered the court?
And, just for total clarity on my part, am I correct that it is permissible to put a spin on the ball that lands inbounds?
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The spin is irrelevant. As Rut said, "dribbling" is fine. The problem is when the thrower passes the ball onto the court and it bounces out of bounds first. If, on the actual in bounds pass, the ball bounces OOB, it is a throwin violation for failure to throw the ball directly onto the playing court.
Again, whether he spins it or not doesn't matter.