Quote:
Originally Posted by hoopguy
It is all part of the one single act of dunking. His head just happens to be in the wrong place, directly where the ball is going in the net. My opinion is that it is all part of the same act of dunking. How can the exception end when the players hands lose contact with the ball? The exceptions whole purpose is to say there is an exception while dunking to not be in violation of BI rules after the hands release the dunk. Just picture 99% of dunks the ball is released and then the dunker is hanging on the rim or at lease his hands are still on the rim AFTER the release of the ball.
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If it's all part of the same act of dunking, then the following scenario would be legal---->A1 dunks the ball; the ball spins back up without going completely through and is circling the ring or is still in the cylinder; A1 jumps again and tips the ball in.
Or the player is hanging on the rim when the ball spins back up and he then taps it back in while hanging there?
You're really trying to say that plays like that are legal?
Sorry, hoopguy. You're mis-interpreting the rule. You're refusing to believe the existence of the first sentence of the EXCEPTION that you're trying to use.