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Old Tue Feb 11, 2003, 02:14pm
ChuckElias ChuckElias is offline
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Freejacked, welcome to the board. First thing I gotta know: are you a fan of Mick Jagger's acting career, or what?

Quote:
Originally posted by Freejacked
Is there a different throw-in procedure for a live ball and dead ball?
Ok, first serious thing is that the ball is always dead before a throw-in. I'm not sure what distinction you're trying to draw. But the whole reason for the throw-in is that the ball has become dead. The throw-in is one of only three ways to make a dead ball into a live ball. (The other two are the jump ball and a free throw.) So just to be clear, the ball must be dead in order to have a throw-in. The ball becomes live when it's at the disposal of the inbounder.

Quote:
let's say after a basket is made by team B, A1 overthrows everyone and the ball goes out on at mid-court. snip Also, this same question but after a dead ball situation, where the official hands the ball to the player for throw in and he overthrows everyone. . .
As others have already said, these are handled the same way. This is not an out-of-bounds violation. Rather, it's a throw-in violation. Since A1 violated the terms of the throw-in, team B is awarded the ball at the spot of A1's illegal throw-in. In all cases, this will be a designated spot throw-in.

Hope that is helpful in some way. Again, welcome to the board!

Chuck
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