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badcoach7 Sat Feb 05, 2005 09:28pm

Team A scores basket...
Team B player grabs ball and takes it out of bounds...few seconds go by and player begins to run the baseline and in the process dribbles the basketball...is this a violation???

Can you dribble out of bounds??

bad coach in NV

Ref Daddy Sat Feb 05, 2005 09:40pm

Neither the dribble nor traveling rule operates during the jump ball, throw-in or free throw.


'Not a dribble , and rules don't apply.'

refnrev Sat Feb 05, 2005 09:44pm

Watch the line. He could violate much more easily while doing this.

williebfree Sat Feb 05, 2005 09:54pm

No Violation.

Rule 7 Section 5 Article 7
After a goal or awarded goal as in 7-4-3 (made free throw), the team not credited with the score shall make the throw-in from the end of the court where the goal was made and FROM ANY POINT OUTSIDE the endline.

Nevadaref Sun Feb 06, 2005 04:22am

2004-05 NFHS Basketball Rules Interpretations posted on NFHS.org

SITUATION 5: Before making a throw-in, A1 dribbles the ball on the floor on the out-of-bounds area. RULING: Legal, a player may bounce the ball on the out-of-bounds area prior to making a throw-in. (9-2-2)


Where in NV do you live and for what school do you coach?

stick Sun Feb 06, 2005 11:23am

The responses thus far are correct. But after a violation--traveling, illegal dribble, etc, the player throwing the ball in cannot run the baseline or sideline. That is a violation.

Jurassic Referee Sun Feb 06, 2005 12:02pm

Quote:

Originally posted by stick
The responses thus far are correct. But after a violation--traveling, illegal dribble, etc, the player throwing the ball in cannot run the baseline or sideline. That is a violation.
Basket interference and goaltending are violations too. Are you saying that the thrower can't run the end line after those violations either?

stick Mon Feb 07, 2005 12:33pm

Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Quote:

Originally posted by stick
The responses thus far are correct. But after a violation--traveling, illegal dribble, etc, the player throwing the ball in cannot run the baseline or sideline. That is a violation.
Basket interference and goaltending are violations too. Are you saying that the thrower can't run the end line after those violations either?

Being those would be considered made baskets the player inbounding can run the baseline.

stosh Mon Feb 07, 2005 12:38pm

Can the player running the baseline go beyond the sidelines extended? I say "no" but can't find anything to prove it.

Dan_ref Mon Feb 07, 2005 12:40pm

Quote:

Originally posted by stick
Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Quote:

Originally posted by stick
The responses thus far are correct. But after a violation--traveling, illegal dribble, etc, the player throwing the ball in cannot run the baseline or sideline. That is a violation.
Basket interference and goaltending are violations too. Are you saying that the thrower can't run the end line after those violations either?

Being those would be considered made baskets the player inbounding can run the baseline.

I got an email from JR this morning, he's busy chasing the mailman today & asked if I would fill in for him as the local pain-in-the-@ss. That said:

Don't you mean those are AWARDED baskets, not considered made baskets?

;)

Jurassic Referee Mon Feb 07, 2005 03:31pm

Quote:

Originally posted by stosh
Can the player running the baseline go beyond the sidelines extended? I say "no" but can't find anything to prove it.
Here we go again. :D

Rule 7-5-7 says that the throw-in must be made from any point outside the end line. Rule 1-2 says the end lines are as shown on the court diagram at the front. That diagram shows the ends of the end lines <b>ending</b> where they meet the sidelines.

Jurassic Referee Mon Feb 07, 2005 03:39pm

Quote:

Originally posted by stick
Quote:

Originally posted by Jurassic Referee
Quote:

Originally posted by stick
The responses thus far are correct. <font color = red>But after a violation--traveling, illegal dribble, etc, the player throwing the ball in cannot run the baseline or sideline</font>. That is a violation.
Basket interference and goaltending are violations too. Are you saying that the thrower can't run the end line after those violations either?

Being those would be considered made baskets the player inbounding can run the baseline.

Those would also be considered violations resulting in awarded goals.

How about if the scoring team commits a violation(say-kicked ball) on an end-line throw-in after a goal, and the closest spot is still the end line? Are you saying that the throwing team can't run the endline after that violation either?

Just pointing out that your statement above to be accurate should say "after some violations", not "after a violation".

RookieDude Mon Feb 07, 2005 03:45pm

Quote:

Originally posted by refnrev
Watch the line. He could violate much more easily while doing this.
I've got to get my daily fix of being a pain in the a**. ;)

Having said that:

are you saying that the person making the throw-in can't step or dribble on the line?

refnrev Mon Feb 07, 2005 10:01pm

RD, Nope. I'm referring to Case book 9.2.2 situtations C&D and 9.2.5. I'm just saying it could be easier in this situation for the inbounder to lose track of where they are and break the plane of the boundary line and touch the court -- hence, a violation. So watch carefully.


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