Thread: Back court
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Old Tue Jan 03, 2017, 03:33pm
Nevadaref Nevadaref is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mbilica View Post
The issue is that the ball has front court status when the A3 touched it, so, A3 caused the ball to have backcourt status. If he lets it bounce, then the floor gives the ball backcourt status and now the last to touch it is the defender.
I'm aware of the status of the ball. I'm also aware of the text of the rule. Note the use of the word "before" in 9-9-1. Before does not equate to simultaneous.
In the play provided, the status of the ball changes from frontcourt to backcourt at the same time as A3 touches it while standing in his backcourt. The rule requires that a member of Team A be the last to touch the ball in frontcourt BEFORE it goes to the backcourt in order for a violation to occur. In this play, A3's touch is simultaneous with the ball going to the backcourt, not before. That doesn't mesh with the rule. The author wants you to accept that A3 is doing two things with one touch--being both the last to touch the ball in the frontcourt and the first to touch it in the backcourt. The rule requires two different points in time and the author can't have it both ways.

If we go back to the previous touch of the ball before A3's, we see that the simple answer is that the last touch in the frontcourt in this scenario was by a member of Team B. A3 merely has the first touch in the backcourt.

Last edited by Nevadaref; Tue Jan 03, 2017 at 03:37pm.
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