Quote:
Originally Posted by Back In The Saddle
If that is the only part of the definition you consider, then a pass is also a dribble, a try is also a dribble, tapping a jump ball is also a dribble, grabbing a rebound is also a dribble...there's going to be a heckuva lot of illegal dribble violations in that game.
Fortunately, the actual definition limits the universe of possible ball movements to two specific ones: batting or pushing the ball to the floor.
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No, I just stopped there to emphasize "ball movement"....a lot of things have to happen before you can 100% prove a definition. For example, A1 passes to A2. Is it a pass or a dribble?? We don't know till the "play" is finished. If A2 catches it, it was a pass. If A2 ran away and A1 caught back up and started bouncing it, it was a dribble.
Same with my theory. A1 pushes ball to floor, lets go, ball moves, A1 picks up...end of dribble.
Or using previous post of the case book:
casebook 4.15 " It is not a dribble when a player stands still and holds the ball and touches it to the floor once or more than once"
I could use the theory that holding it does not constitute a dribble so therefore letting go does.