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Block, he's still stepping into the shooter as he's going up.
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"He who says he can and he who says he can't are both usually correct." - Confucius |
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I'm not 100% sure, but I lean towards "blocK". It looks like the defender is moving sideways, but not obliquely, into the path of the shooter upon contact. From the center's angle he may see otherwise, though, so I'm not up in arms over the call.
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C is trying to see what the defender is doing through the offensive player's back. He doesn't appear to be able to see if the defense has gotten into position.
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"He who says he can and he who says he can't are both usually correct." - Confucius |
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Oh, I never said he didn't establish it. Or I didn't mean to. Just that I'm not sure he maintained it before contact.
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![]() I'm happy with the defense on this play. Playing defense is hard and I think too many officials look for a reason to say a defender is illegal. Edited to add: I do not think the defender is moving in any illegal (read: forward) way at the point of contact. |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Bryan doesn't understand legal defensive movement. The offensive player is not airborne at the time of contact, so the defender is permitted by rule to be moving sideways. Had the offensive player left the floor, the defender would need to stop sliding to his left. |
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Without doing the freezeframe thing, it looked like the defender took another step sideways (right before contact his left foot moves another few inches to his left) into the shooter. Sideways or lateral movement is allowed provided it's not towards the opponent when contact occurs.
By pausing and going frame by frame (as best I can, at least), it does look like the defender's left foot touches the floor before contact. Therefore, the defender did not move sideways into the shooter. Basically, the defender beat him to the spot. BTW, I understand LGP and how to maintain it. I'm just not somebody that is going to give the benefit of the doubt to the defense. It's like in baseball... either the runner is out or the runner is safe. There's no "well, the shortstop made a great stop and throw, so I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt and call the runner out". Doing that is a cop-out. Not that the call is easy to make, but it should come down to how you saw the play, not whether playing defense is hard or not. |
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https://forum.officiating.com/basket...est-video.html The offensive player is not yet airborne and the defender is definitely moving sideways at the time of contact. This is legal defensive movement. |
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Just the opposite. I'm telling you that it applies and is exactly what makes the defender's movement in these two plays legal. You are misapplying this rule because you are equating sideways movement to movement towards the shooter. That isn't correct. FORWARD movement by the defender is movement towards the shooter and is illegal at the time of contact. The rule specifically states that lateral (sideways) or oblique (at an angle) movement by the defender is allowed, yet you are penalizing the defender for that. That is where you are mistaken.
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