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Weird chain of events Just want to know if we got it right??....In an AAU Christmas Tourney had a player from white foul the red team player on a shot. My partner is the "L" and calls the foul. Then the red player that just fouled the shooter kicks the shin of another player right in front of my partner who calls the intentional foul. As he is reporting the foul, reds head coach unloads the "F" bomb. So now a Tech to the coach.
So we had 2 for the shot, 2 for the intentional, 2 for the tech. Now the question. We placed the ball on the base line for the white team because of the Intentional foul. Right or wrong????
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Assuming that you're playing by Fed rules. . .
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Personal foul. Penalty, two FTs. Quote:
Dead ball fighting. Flagrant technical foul. Penalty, 2 FTs, plus the ball at the division line. Offender is DQ'd. Quote:
Again, assuming that this is under Fed rules, you penalize the fouls in the order in which they occur. That means that the player who was originally fouled on the shot gets 2 FTs with no one on the lane. Then anyone on the white team can shoot the next 4 FTs. Then white gets the ball at midcourt opposite the table. The penalties are slightly different for NCAA, but the result is essentially the same. 2 FTs for red, then 4 FTs for white and the ball at midcourt. (Coach would also not lose the coaching box.) [Edited by ChuckElias on Jan 2nd, 2004 at 11:35 AM]
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Assumung NF rules, white should get the ball at the division line. You penalize the fouls in the order in which they occur. So the red player who was fouled would get 2 FTs, followed by 2 FTs for the white player who was fouled, followed by 2 FTs by a designated red player for the T. Since the last foul was the T on the red coach, white gets the ball.
If you're using NCAA rules, you shoot the FTs for the T immediately. You'd then shoot the FTs for the other fouls in the order in which they occured. The last foul was the intentional by the white player, so the ball would be put in play by red at the designated spot nearest where the foul occured. Now, kicking a player falls under the definition of fighting, and the penalty should be a flagrant foul, which carries ejection as part of the penalty. Finally, the kicking occured while the ball was dead, so it should be a T, not a personal foul. |
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The bottom line is that it doesn't matter what order you shoot them in, b/c you're going to shoot them ALL with no one on the lane and then white is going to get the ball. But to do it by the book, I think I've got it right above. . . Bob, Dan, Dev, anyone. . . thoughts?
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White fouls red - 2 shots Red kicks white (it says red just fouled then kicks another player. I thought white fouled red?) - intentional T 2 shots and ball at division line Red coach - 2 shots point of interruption The intentional T gives the ball to white so the POI is at the division line for the T on the coach. So, I would administer the shots T, intentional T, foul shots. Should the foul shots come before the intentional T? I think the intentional T is the only thing that could effect the order you shoot the shots. This is a constructive scenario. |
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If we're talking HS rules, then my first post in the thread is the way to do it. I won't rehash it here. If we're talking about NCAA rules (for men!). . . Quote:
I think I disagree with this. The FTs have not been shot, so the POI can't be the throw-in. The POI must be with FTs. Quote:
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Under NCAA (men or women), I think that the kick would count as fighting (4-23.3a, 10-17.1b) and so this would be a flagrant technical foul (10-18.1).
I did mess up the penalty, though, forgetting that the penalty for a flagrant T doesn't involve POI. You'd do the FTs for the coach's T, then go to POI, which is the FTs for the personal foul followed by the FTs for the flagrant T. I think that the rule book contradicts itself on where the ball is put back in play (for men). 10-14.1 (Men) tells us to go with the division line. 10-18.4 tells us to go with the spot closest to the foul. For the women, 10-14.1 (Women) and 10-18.4 are consistent---go with the spot closest to the foul. [Edited by Lotto on Jan 2nd, 2004 at 01:27 PM] |
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Assuming that the kick by the red player (who was originally fouled in the act of shooting) was a flagrant T and warrented ejection, shouldn't the first course of action then be to inform the player and coach of disqualification and bring on a replacement who would then be the designated shooter of the free throws for the first foul (in the act of shooting)?
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Chuck I was talking NCAA rules and what I typed was kind of jacked up!
IMHO the POI was after what should have been an Intentional T/Flagrant. I agree with you that the order isn't really an issue. However the POI was at the point where one team would have been awarded the ball at the division line. If you look at the original post it didn't make sense and it contradicted itself. Maybe it was edited between my earlier post and now. OK something was changed. Look at the original post by garote then what I have in quotes in my second post. Now Garote's first post is understandable. White will shoot 2 free throws and 4 shots for technicals. Then the ball will be taken out at the division line. NCAA rules. [Edited by tomegun on Jan 2nd, 2004 at 06:38 PM] |
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So, those of you who do h.s., college--either or both, preferably both as I want an opinion on all three, which set of mechanics/rules do you prefer for this situation and why?
It seems to me that Fed. rules/mech. are most straight forward and easiest to admin. Any agreement with this? |
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