Interesting question. I'll definitely be looking for others' responses to this one.
First, a couple questions. Had the ball been released? If not, was it beyond the boundary when it was slapped by A1?
These are the important questions. It can't be a T if the ball had been released. It also can't be a T if the ball is across the boundary, even if it hasn't been released. If the ball was released and A1 hit it, I'd just have an OB violation on A1, and B would get the ball for a spot throw-in. If the ball hadn't been released but was across the boundary, I'd probably go with a boundary plane delay warning on the principle that the throw-in hadn't been released and A was across the boundary when making the play on the ball.
If the ball hasn't been released and is outside the boundary, this is a T.
All this is predicated on the fact that A1 was attempting to come right back onto the court and not unduly delaying his return.
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