Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam
I'd wait and see where A2 goes with it once he receives the pass. A3 won't get the chance to fix it.
The NFHS seems (to me) to have made it clear they just want us to call the violation rather than wait 5 seconds for the inevitable.
Your way isn't bad, unless B is running a press. What if A2 travels or double dribbles? Everyone is going to wonder why you didn't call that only to call a throw-in violation 3-4 seconds later. I think it avoids confusion.
If A1 steps towards OOB, but never makes it before throwing up court, would you just keep counting to 5? If B2 fouls A2 going up for a shot while you're at 4 in your count?
Too many odd variables that get avoided if you just call the violation when it's clear they aren't going to do it right. No need to judge intent or read minds, it's pretty clear from their actions.
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Yeah, I lied, mostly. I'm always starting a five second count, but not necessarily finishing it. There's been times where I've blown a play dead before finishing my count. Maybe a better way to put it is I'm not blowing a violation
just because A1 doesn't step OOB before throwing the ball in.