Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref
Bottom line: If the defender is on the floor in the path of the offensive player when the player becomes airborne, and the defender's only movement is directly away from the offensive player, it is impossible for this defender to commit a blocking foul, whether he ever had legal guarding position or not.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrapper1
This is true (in NFHS rules), although I'm not sure why it's the bottom line. . .
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Isn't that what happened in the play below?
Quote:
A1 dribbles toward the basket. A1 and B1 make slight or no contact. B1 falls backwards of his/her own volition. A1 becomes airborne to attempt a try. On returning to the floor, A1 trips over B1 who is now lying on the floor.
90% of the time, B1 has taken a defensive position (if you can call it that) under A1 after A1 has become airborne. This is not a legal position. If contact ensues that prevents A1 from landing normally, this is going to be a block.
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Are you saying that B1 falling kills the deal? If he had stood still and A1 had done the same thing, it would have been PC? If he had
stepped backward prior to the crash, it would have been PC?