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					Originally Posted by mbcrowder  Stops to avoid a collision.  Who cares about why ... if she would not have stopped, would she have collided?  If so, then she stopped to avoid a collision.
 TO doesn't have to mean, "because she wanted to..."
 TO can mean "in order to"
 |  I think you missed my point.  The assumption was that she stopped to avoid a collision.  However it is possible that she merely stopped to field the ball and there would not have been a collision.  Assuming what might happen is often different that what actually does happen.  Hence my assertion that she was not interfered with - she made the play.
		 
				__________________Mark
 
 NFHS, NCAA, NAFA
 "If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?" Anton Chigurh - "No Country for Old Men"
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