Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
That may be your defintion but it is not correct.
It is also dead on a made basket after the ball drops through the basket and stays dead until the throw-in team has the ball OOB for a throwin (or the official feels they should have had the ball OOB for a throwin).
It is also dead the moment the official blows the whistle for a foul (or until an airborne shooter lands)....not just after the foul is reported.
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Cameron,
My definition of a dead ball is from a timer's POV. How I see a dead ball situation is that no player has control of the ball for a throw-in or free throw attempt (after a foul, during a time-out, or intermission). If the clock is running, the ball is not dead, unless a running clock rule is in effect (as the clock only stops for time-outs or intermissions).
IOW, when the timer can buzz the officials to signal that a substitute is waiting at the table or when play is stopped.