Quote:
Originally Posted by AllPurposeGamer
He's explaining that provision in the rule. The defense isn't allowed to touch the ball on the throw-in side of the boundary plane. If the above provision wasn't part of the throw-in restrictions, Team A could inbound the ball in an area where Team B would not be legally able to defend.
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Right-while the ball is being held by the thrower. I'm just looking at it from the standpoint that following the release, a defender potentially could reach across the boundary plane on a designated throw-in and intercept the pass; but an offensive player cannot do the same to receive such a pass.