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Saw this posted on another forum, looked in the case book at 9.9.1 and couldn't find anything definite on this play. The closest i could get was 9.9.1.a
Any help? "If a player is in the frontcourt and jumps backcourt to receive a pass from a player in the backcourt, but he is still in the air when he receives the pass, is this a backcourt violation? I saw this last night, I was sitting on the half-court line and I thought the ball never left the backcourt nor broke the plane. I always thought the rule was basically everything across, ball and both feet of player, and nothing back. My guess is there is more to the rule than that because the call was made by one of the better officials around in my opinion." [Edited by eyezen on Feb 25th, 2004 at 01:57 PM] |
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Don't really need a casebook play on this one, it's pretty easy to figure out. Take it step-by-step. . . For a backcourt violation, we need 4 things, right? They are: 1) team control 2) frontcourt status 3) Team A is last to touch before it goes backcourt 4) Team A is first to touch after going backcourt. So, in your play. . . Quote:
There is passing going on, so we have team control (unless it's a throw-in pass). There's #1. When the player jumped from the frontcourt, he had frontcourt status. So when he catches the ball, the ball also has frontcourt status. That's #2. But that's all we have. So no violation at this point. However, if the player then lands in the backcourt with the ball, #3 and #4 will both be met at the same time. And so, we'd have a violation. Quote:
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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It amazes me how many people don't understand this play.
I made the same call in a summer tourney prior to this season. The coach, who is the president of the local coaches association thought I was wrong during the game, and had incorrectly penalized his team. He had confused this play with what can legally take place on a throw-in, and politely asked me about it after the game. I discussed both situations with him and explained the rulings. That's one better-informed coach. The message is getting out, it's just a long educational process. |
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Remember though, this doesn't apply to the jump ball or a defensive player. Have seen backcourt called on a defensive player jumping from his own frontcourt intercepting a pass and landing backcourt (not a violation). Assuming I'm correct I think this is something that puts us in a tough situation when based on essentially the same action the rule is applied differently depending on who makes the play.
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My job is a decision-making job, and as a result, I make a lot of decisions." --George W. Bush |
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