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A1, the thrower-in, releases the ball for her throw-in. B1 reaches across the out-of-bounds line and touches the ball before the ball crosses into in-bounds territory. Do you treat this the same way as if B1 as if B1 reached across the line and hadn't touched the ball (with a warning and a T for the next time B reaches across)?
If not, how do you handle this? |
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It's either a legal play, or a T for touching the ball before it crosses the boundary. |
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Why is this action left up to the discretion of a ref or his assignor? Rule 10-3 Art. 11 clearly states that it is a T if a player reaches through the throw-in boundary line plane and touches or dislodges the ball. It doesn't say that the ball must still be in the thrower's hands. A T is also merited if A1 OOB tosses to A2 OOB (after a goal by B) and B1 reaches across the line and touches ball in flight.
The Technical Foul Summary on page 76 again states that it is a player T for reaching through to touch or dislodge the ball. I have been taught this as a black and white situation. Are others finding this a gray area? |
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This change makes the more popular interpretation (viz., there's no infraction once the throw-in pass has been released) also the more likely.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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I use NCAA women's rules (modified slightly for use in HS).
The situation of B1 reaching out-of-bounds and slapping the ball from A1's hands is explicitly covered (10-3.19, AR 9a) as is the case where B1 touches the ball being passed between out-of-bounds teammates after a score (7-6.5b AR 17 and 10-3.19 AR9b) as an indirect technical for delaying the game. Reaching through the plane is a violation (7-6.5b and 9-4.5). However, reaching through the plane and touching the ball after A1 has released the ball for a direct throw-in is not mentioned. 9-4.5 reads: The opponents of the thrower-in shall not have any part of their person beyond the vertical inside plane of any boundary line before the ball has crossed that boundary line. I conclude from this that the situation I described can't be legal and is at least a violation. (NF rules may differ on this.) Further comments, esp. from those who ref with NCAA rules? I'd like to know best how to deal with this... [Edited by Lotto on Dec 9th, 2003 at 08:45 AM] |
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NCAA 9-4-5 says that no opponent of the thrower shall have any part of his/her body across the OOB plane until the ball has crossed the plane and come inbounds. Under NCAA, I would call the violation if the defender touched the ball before it came inbounds. (He had to be across the line before he touched the ball, right?)
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Sounds like Chuck has also found a clarification that says something similar to above.
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"There are no superstar calls. We don't root for certain teams. We don't cheat. But sometimes we just miss calls." - Joe Crawford |
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From now on, I'll probably call a violation and warn so that the next reaching through by B is a T (whether or not they touch). Players would make reffing so much easier if they just obeyed all the rules! |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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I don't remember either side of this debate being more popular. This unannounced rule change does, however, end the debate....it is nothing for the defense to touch the ball on the OOB side of the line once the throw-in pass is release. |
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I don't remember either side of this debate being more popular. [/B][/QUOTE] NO!! Camron, I was on your side of this argument. And we were right, too. But I'm pretty sure that we were wayyyyyyy out-numbered.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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__________________
Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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