Quote:
Originally Posted by NCHSAA
I am seeing more and more of this move coming down from the NBA to the college and high school ranks. Are yall seeing the same?
Here's the debate:
A1 pump fakes and B2 bites on the fake and jumps forward. A1 then attempts a shot and jumps into B2 who is airborne. A foul is called on B2 which sends A1 to the line.
A lot of guys in my local association agree with this foul on the defense even though the offensive player created contact also, if not first. My take is that both are at fault, the defense was not within their vertical plane, and the offensive player jumped forward into the defense trying to get the call. I am alright with a foul if the offensive player jumped straight up, or even slightly forward (some players jump straight up and some jump 3 feet forward on their jumpshots).
Anyone agree or am I alone here?
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Do you look at what the rule book says about a situation before you post it?
In this play, the rule is clear.
4-23-3c
After the initial legal guarding position is obtained:
The guard may move laterally or obliquely to maintain position,
provided it is not toward the opponent when contact occurs.
If the defender is moving toward the opponent with the ball when the contact occurs, the foul is on the defender. Who initiated the contact is of no consequence, by rule.
The shooter can jump 10 feet forward if he chooses to. It's not a foul unless the contact is against a defender with legal position.