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Old Mon Feb 03, 2014, 10:55am
rockyroad rockyroad is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Vancouver, WA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BryanV21 View Post
Rule 4-23
ART. 5... Guarding a moving opponent without the ball:
a. Time and distance are factors required to obtain initial legal position.
b. The guard must give the opponent the time and/or distance to avoid contact.
c. The distance need not be more than two strides.

I wouldn't treat the player receiving the ball as "an opponent with the ball", as in Article 4... where time and distance are not factors. By the time he caught and gathered the ball he had no chance to do anything with it (dribble, shoot, pass, or just stop with it), as the defender was less than two steps away.

Perhaps if the defender was within the offensive player's line of sight, then you can say the offensive player had enough of a chance to avoid contact. But since the offensive player was looking back and up at the pass, I would say without reservation that the defender was at fault for the contact.
Had the offensive player caught the pass before the contact took place?

He obviously had, so then he had the ball and time and distance are not factors.
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