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Yes -- if he pulled the foot forward, then it was still moving at the time of contact -- it may or may not have been removed from the RA
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You can see from one of the angles that his upper body is moving forward and sideways at the time of contact.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Yes you are! When you see these plays just make sure to watch the defender closely and look for the point of contact cuz that is often where the foul is. In plays like this the defenders love to stick their knees in there to displace the opponent, so that would be a further clue.
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These guys are coached to do this subtle tactics in hopes that officials will not see the contact or will think the contact is marginal.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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While that might be the case, I don't believe it is necessarily the case. I can easily see that a player could stop moving forward (based on the torso) but not put the foot back down.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Hmmm -- this might be a rule differenca. I think the NCAAW rule is that if initial LGP is inside the RA, it's a block (unless the player re-establishes LGP outside the RA, and, of course, assuming the rest of the conditions are met). I know if the player establishes LGP outside the RA, the player can back into the RA and be legal.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Incorrect. You can still have LGP in the RA -- it's just that sometimes the illegal contact is ruled a charge and sometimes it's ruled a block, depending on what lead to the illegal contact.
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That is a general statement about all plays, right? In the play in question from the OP, it is a secondary defender, so he cannot establish LGP within the RA. Or am I misinterpreting the wording? Is this a thing where LGP can be obtained anywhere technically, but if it is established within the RA, its more or less useless (again as a secondary defender) because it will be ruled a block regardless?
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This. And, in NCAAW, it's not always illegal for the secondary defender -- only if the play starts outside the LDB, and there hasn't been a secondary move in the LDB, or the offense doesn't lead with an arm or foot, etc. |
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He attempted to pull his foot forward, but it was still in the air at the time of contact. And his left shoulder was moving forward at the time of contact.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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I agree with the block for the body still moving forward. But does the foot actually have to be on the floor to have LGP? What if the player gets out of the RA entirely (perhaps by several inches), stops moving forward and jumps straight up without touching the 2nd foot down outside the RA?
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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