![]() |
|
|||
I also cannot think straight
I'm confused on the "fumble rule" and would love a ruling as I cannot find anything in the HS rule book except the definition and this does not help interpret certain plays.
Play - A1 finishes his dribble, looks to throw the ball to another player but stops his throw as the other player breaks the other way and it fumbles out of A1's hands onto the floor. A1 takes 2 or 3 steps and pick up the all. He does not dribble again, he just picks it up. What is the ruling? There is nothing in the case book now but I remember from a past case play that if the ref deemed it to be truly a fumble (and not a pass that he goes and gets because the other player broke the other way), he or she may go pick it up because you cannot walk or double dribble when you have no player control. ![]() |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
in OS I trust |
|
|||
Quote:
Agree you cannot dribble-fumble-dribble. But what was described was dribble-fumble-retrieve. That's legal. |
|
|||
Quote:
The ball hitting the ground was start of a second dribble if touched by the same offensive player. IF there are rule/case plays that prove I'm wrong please cite.
__________________
in OS I trust |
|
|||
I can't because this is a HTBT kind of play, or we'd at least need to see video to talk about the official's judgment.
I could certainly see a player start a pass, realize his man isn't there, then reach out with the non-throwing hand to stop the throwing motion and secure the ball. And then fumble. Tiger Woods has been known to check a golf swing mid-stroke. Tennis players sometimes stop a serve post-toss and start over. What's to say a point guard with good reflexes also couldn't stop a passing motion mid-throw? |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
in OS I trust |
|
|||
Please look up the definition of dribble and then compare it to what the OP actually says before you spew this nonsense.
|
|
|||
Quote:
4-15-1: A dribble is ball movement caused by a player in control who bats (intentionally strikes the ball with the hand(s)) or pushes the ball to the floor once or several times. It is not a part of a dribble when teh ball touches a player's own backboard. 1-15-3: The dribble begins by pushing, throwing or batting the ball to the floor before the pivot foot is lifted. Now, stay with me, because it may go over your head. How can a player with control go to make a pass (an intentional act) then intentionally change his mind, and you call that a FUMBLE????? A fumble is when a player goes to pick up his dribble cut FUMBLES gathering the ball. You can't have control of the ball with both hands go to pass, change your mind and then suddenly FUMBLE. It's throwing the ball to the floor and the start of a dribble.
__________________
in OS I trust |
|
|||
Quote:
If you're going to claim nonsense at someone try to at least back it up. |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
in OS I trust |
|
|||
Quote:
|
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Can't think straight...need assistance | egj13 | Basketball | 14 | Tue Dec 22, 2015 02:36pm |
Don't get yourself straight-lined! | briancurtin | Baseball | 19 | Sat May 05, 2012 09:25am |
Just the T, or straight to the bench? | Lukester | Basketball | 19 | Thu Feb 09, 2012 04:32pm |
straight arm | Texoma_LJ | Football | 4 | Mon Jul 04, 2005 09:20am |
Straight Up | rainmaker | Basketball | 10 | Wed Feb 02, 2005 06:02pm |