Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrapper1
No matter how you phrase the question, the answer is that after the ballhandler becomes airborne, the defender moves to the spot where the airborne player will land. Again, I cannot believe that it is the intent of the rules to allow this. Once that player becomes airborne, no one can move into that player's landing spot.
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Are you serious? Didn't you read the agreed-upon scenario? The defender started moving backward upon the initial contact
BEFORE the offensive player jumped. The defender was
ALREADY moving backward either from the incidental contact or from trying to avoid further contact
BEFORE the offensive player became airborne!
No matter how you phase the question, the ballhandler became airborne after the defender started moving straight backwards and jumped into/onto the defender. The rules do not allow us to call a block because by rule the defender has not done anything illegal.