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A lot of knowledge and experience in this forum.. and I'm sure this post has probably existed in the past. But, thought it would be informative for all. 2 things to talk about.
TALK ABOUT THE LITTLE THINGS that some of you do in games that maybe not everyone thinks or knows about ? (My 2 cents: Trail moving onto the court off the sideline to create a better angle to see matchup play coming from the wing, instead of glueing yourself to the sideline) or TALK ABOUT THE WIERD PLAYS that have happened in your games and how you handled them ?? Not really looking for extensive debate on what is right or wrong... just ideas for everyone... so that we can learn from others. Decide on your own wether it is something you'd like to use or not. And i'm talking about little things.. little ideas.. Pregames talks, how you've handled players/coaches, etc... Let's keep it productive. |
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mick |
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I think the weirdest play I've ever had was during the jump when both jumpers went up, swung, and trapped the ball between their upstretched hands, and came down and landed with the ball right there between their hands. We re-jumped. |
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OK, Imagine this, player is dribbling full speed toward his basket on a fast break, somehow, the ball lands directly between his legs and gets trapped for a second.
As the player takes the next stride, the ball gets flipped up and over his head from back to front and he catches it in stride and shoots without dribbling again and scores. The official was laughing so hard he could not call a thing. |
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I had kind of a weird play in a game. Team A has the ball in the front court and their point guard, A1, is dribbling outside the three point line. A1 picks up his dripple and throws a hard pass into the lane. The ball bounces of B player and goes strait up and into the hoop, without touching another A player. We counted the basket as a three and played on. Saying it was the same as a tip on a shot because A1 threw the ball in from behind the three point line.
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If another player legally "tips" a shot inside the arc, as you state above, that automatically ends the 3-point attempt also, and only 2 points can be scored. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Here's my "little thing" to add to this thread. Somebody said that they get bored in the C position. Well, here's one small thing to add to your "C" responsibilities.
When the post player has the ball right in front of the Lead, and then dribbles or pivots away from the baseline (toward the Trail) and then continues into the lane and shoots, that play is the Center's primary responsibility. The ball is coming right at the C, and the C should take anything that happens on that move. Train yourself to extend your vision just a little when the low-post player spins away from the baseline.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Right now the two rules conflict, and that is not a good situation. The play should be worth only 2 pts. What is the difference if the ball is thrown with an arc that goes above the level of the ring and then back down to hit a defender, standing in the lane on the shoulder, and goes in or if the ball is thrown hard and in a straight line at the defender? A team should only be awarded three points if the ball had a chance to go in after being thrown. I just looked up the comment that accompanied that rule change and it says: "While in most situations a "try" can be differentiated from a pass, to eliminate possible confusion this change should help to clarify by not requiring judgment as to whether the ball in flight was a pass or try." 2001-2002 Rules Book page 72. Therefore, this rule change is intended to only apply to that particular situation. We are not supposed to use it to justify awarding 3 pts on a play like the one described above. Bottom line: use common sense and know the intent of the rule! [Edited by Nevadaref on Apr 28th, 2004 at 06:12 AM] |
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I'm goin' with JR
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I do not believe that you believe that. mick Dripple : liquid draining from an old ref's mouth to that old ref's chin from the Fox orifice. It is encouraged to pick up one's dripple as often as necessary. |
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[/B][/QUOTE]Or more commonly known as "drooling" amongst us old folks. Oooooo, pipple Don't wanna cause a ripple but because I tipple I got dripple coming from my lipple onto my nipple. Oh what, oh what shall I do? |
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Re: I'm goin' with JR
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SECTION 2 SCORING ART. 1 . . . A successful try, tap or thrown ball that does not touch the floor, a teammate or official, from the field by a player who is located behind the team's own 19-foot, 9-inch line counts three points. Any other goal from the field counts two points for the team into whose basket the ball is thrown. See 4-5-4. If the ball is thrown from behind the arc, and it doesn't touch the floor, teammate or official, the rule says it's 3 points. I also know what the casebook says. But this rule obviously and unambiguously states that it's 3 points. If everybody agrees that the rule is worded incorrectly, and we all agree to call it some other way, fine. But the rule is crystal clear.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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