Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
It also doesn't say two players can't tap the ball and score.
If the taps are sufficiently close together such that the time from the first touch to the final touch is less than 0.3, the shot counts. If the final touch is by the defense, only the first tap must beat the 0.3 time.
The only thing this rule is intended to preclude is a catch and shoot.
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This is my take on the rule as well, especially the last sentence.
The point of the rule is not to specify how many taps (the rules makers would have written "one tap" instead of "a tap" if that were their intent), but rather to prohibit a player catching the ball and shooting with so little time on the clock.
The contrast is between "a tap" and "a tap or a try."