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Old Mon Dec 06, 2010, 05:25pm
Eastshire Eastshire is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,262
Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
No dribbler wants the ball at a location where they can't reach it.
Not true as Jurassic's scenario shows.

Quote:
In the case of a dribbler going OOB but leaving the ball inbounds, that is a matter of judgement.

It is a matter of the "choices" A1 has. It is not a matter of distance (although distance can be a clue) or the number of bounces (but that too can be a clue), but a matter of continuous control....of both the ball and player location.

In the event A1 leaves the ball and goes OOB because of momentum, they are not choosing to go OOB. Batting the ball back inbounds until they can return is NOT a dribble. It is an attempt ot save the ball from going OOB. Since they've not ended the dribble, they can resume it upon returning.
It is a dribble. A1 has batted the ball to the floor. That's the definition of a dribble. I'll grant you it is rarely a controlled dribble and generally the ball gets away making it an interrupted dribble.

Quote:
However, if A1, while fully in control, chooses to bounce the ball to some location and goes OOB around a defender to get to the ball, A1 has violated.....call it either an OOB violation or leaving the court without authorization, but it the result is the same.
Now that you mention it, you really are going to end up with one violation or the other.
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