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6-4-5
A friend asked me about what should happen to the possession arrow when Team A is called for a five second violation during an AP throw in. So I got to explaining the rule...
In 6-4-5, it says that if Team A fouls during an AP throw in, they will not lose the possession arrow. Though if they violate (five seconds, etc), they will lose the arrow. Why the difference? |
The difference is simple. They want the arrow to change on a violation or lose the arrow on a violation and not a foul. Think of it this way, a foul could have further penalty to them like shooting FTs or maybe even shoot FTs and getting the ball to the other team. A violation you only lose the ball, that is why I believe there is the difference.
Peace |
Throw-in ends when throw-in team violates. AP arrow switches when AP throw-in ends.
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This seems like it should be a (in very technical terms, obviously) you-had-your-chance kind of a situation. |
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Peace |
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Checking out the history of rule changes can also help you understand why some rules may seem weird now. Changing rules can have confusing impacts on officials who only read one years rule book. Example: Team control now on throw-ins. |
Edmund Burke ???
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Those who don't know history are destined to repeat it. (Edmund Burke) I bet that Edmund Burke never officiated a basketball game. |
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You bring up the history of rules changes. I've only been doing high school ball since 2009. Was this a rule change at some point? |
Young Guns ...
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I never met the person who wrote the rules so I can't tell you why. I just make sure I enforce it correctly every time.
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