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Jumper A1 jumps into jumper B1 at jump to start the game. Not incidental contact, both feet came down on other side of the line. What should the call be on this? I believe I blew it by calling a jump ball violation, but should have called a foul (pushing?).
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If the contact caused by A1 was at the level of contact that would have induced you to call a foul at any other point in the game, then yes. If not, then no.
Only you can decide, since determining the level of contact that you would consider worthy of a foul call is totally subjective. Did you ask your partner later? If so, what did she/he say? (can you tell Juulie's influence here?)
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F-foul before any time comes off the clock. LOL |
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Just to answer Champ's (or is it TJ's?) original question, there is no jump ball violation for landing in the "other" half of the jump circle. So if jumping across the line creates contact that puts the other jumper at a disadvantage, it has to be a foul. If it doesn't cause a disadvantage, then it's nothing.
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However, you can certainly have a flagrant foul at any point (inclusive) between when the official's jurisdiction begins and when the referee approves the final score. In this case, it could even be a flagrant personal foul, because the ball is live once it leaves the R's hands.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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