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Old Mon Feb 06, 2012, 11:18am
tophat67 tophat67 is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac View Post


The shooter can retrieve his or her own airball, if the referee considers it to be a shot attempt. The release ends team control. It is not a violation for that player to start another dribble at that point. When an airborne player keeps control of an attempted shot that is blocked and is unable to release the ball and returns to the floor with it, that player has not traveled; it is a held ball. If, in this situation, the shooter loses control of the ball because of the block, then this is simply a blocked shot and play continues. If, in this situation, the defender simply touches the ball, and the airborne shooter returns to the floor holding the ball, it’s a traveling violation. When an airborne player tries for goal, sees that the try will be blocked, purposely drops the ball, and picks up the ball after it hits the floor, that player has traveled by starting a dribble with the pivot foot off the floor.
So in the case when a player goes up for a shot and has the ball touched by a defender, momentarily bobbles the ball and comes down with it, without getting off a shot, this is NOT a travel? Correct?
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