Quote:
Originally Posted by crosscountry55
Bingo. You can deem one or both parts flagrant, but by definition you cannot deem them technical.
Which brings up some interesting sidebars:
1. NFHS: Suppose one part of the double personal foul is intentional or flagrant, and the other is common? What do you do?
2. NCAA: Suppose one part of the double personal foul is F1 or F2 and the other part is not the same. What do you do?
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NCAAW (and I think Men is the same, except the throw-in is at the division line)
Art. 10. After any double personal or technical fouls or any simultaneous personal or technical fouls when there is team control and only one of the fouls is a flagrant foul, play shall be resumed with a throw-in to the offended team at the point of interruption