Quote:
Originally Posted by oakgrove1
This may be off topic but why do they have the "visible count" in basketball?
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The inbounding player does not have a plane restriction, but has
five seconds to release the ball and it must come directly onto the court.
A
ten-second count continues when the defense deflects or bats the ball in the backcourt. When a dribbler is advancing the ball into the frontcourt, the ball maintains backcourt status until both feet and the ball touch entirely in the frontcourt.
The closely guarded rule is in effect in frontcourt only, when a defender is within six feet of the ball handler. Up to three separate
five-second counts may occur on the same ball handler, holding, dribbling, and holding. The count continues even if defenders switch. The five-second count ends when a dribbler gets his or her head and shoulders ahead of the defender.
A free throw shooter has
ten seconds to shoot.
A visible count is
not necessary on a three second violation.