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-   -   Interesting situation. (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/18697-interesting-situation.html)

Jerry Blum Tue Feb 22, 2005 11:39am

A1 with ball well outside of 3-point arc. Throws a pass toward A2 in the post(on the block), B2 makes great defensive play and gets around A1 without fouling and deflects the pass. Pass goes in the basket. How many points is team A credited with?

Brought up in association meeting last night thought I'd get the boards response to it.

LouisianaDave Tue Feb 22, 2005 11:41am

2 pts, because B2 touched the ball and he was standing in 2pt area.

Adam Tue Feb 22, 2005 11:44am

Quote:

Originally posted by LouisianaDave
2 pts, because B2 touched the ball and he was standing in 2pt area.
Mostly right. Because B2 touched the ball a ball that wasn't a try from inside the arc.
Your wording is incomplete because of this scenario:
A1 outside arc. B1 guarding him, standing inside arc (or on it).
B1 partially blocks A1's 3-pt attempt. It still goes in. Three points.

LouisianaDave Tue Feb 22, 2005 11:51am

Very correct snaq, I should have worded my response better.

Jerry Blum Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:01pm

From what we read in the Rule book last night that is incorrect. It should be 3pts. I don't have the exact rule cite but I believe that in the scoring section is where this looks like it should be 3pts.

The rule says if a tap, tip, try or "thrown" ball from behind the arc goes in the basket without being touched by a teammate, referee, etc..( I forget the actually wording but it doesn't include the defender) team A should be credited with 3pts.

This, I believe was the rule change a couple of years ago that deals with an alley-oop pass entering the basket withour being touched.

I would have agreed with you that it should be 2pts and 2pts will be the easiest to sell to both coaches but reading the rule it sounds like it should be 3pts.


FrankHtown Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:30pm

4-40-4...a try ends when the throw is successful, when it is certain the throw is unsuccessful,when the thrown ball touches the floor,or the ball becomes dead.

The try for a three could be judged ended when it was below the level of the rim, for example. However a live ball did go into the basket.

2 points.

mopar60 Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:36pm

ugh
 
Boy, with the wording of that scoring rule saying "or THROWN ball that does not touch the floor, a teammate or official......." i hope it never happens on my watch with a coach who is a bookworm. Especially after reviewing 04-05 casebook 5.2.1 Situation C (b) which states "A1 THROWS the ball from behind the three point line. The ball is leglly touched by: (b)B1 who is in the 2 point area"

Sorry, but if we are using the rulebook, it is a 3.

Next.

bob jenkins Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:45pm

Re: ugh
 
Quote:

Originally posted by mopar60
Boy, with the wording of that scoring rule saying "or THROWN ball that does not touch the floor, a teammate or official......." i hope it never happens on my watch with a coach who is a bookworm. Especially after reviewing 04-05 casebook 5.2.1 Situation C (b) which states "A1 THROWS the ball from behind the three point line. The ball is leglly touched by: (b)B1 who is in the 2 point area"

Sorry, but if we are using the rulebook, it is a 3.

Next.

Right. The position of the defense doesn't matter -- only the position of the offensive player who last touches the ball.

The NCAA interp is a little different (if the thrown ball has any chance of going in the basket, 3 points. If it doesnt -- ball thrown in a direction well away from basket, ball below basket and heading down, etc -- score 2 points).


FrankHtown Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:46pm

If you, as the referee, judge it was a "try" and the "try" had not ended, score a 3, however, the thread said it was a pass, and if it went below the level of the rim, the "try" has ended, since the "try" was certainly unsuccessful. Therefore, it cannot still be a "try" for a 3. But the ball went in, so score 2.


Adam Tue Feb 22, 2005 12:56pm

In high school, it doesn't to be a "try" for it to be a three. This way, when a pass accidentally goes in, it could be a three. Before, it had to be a two unless the ref thought it was a purposeful attempt.

ChuckElias Tue Feb 22, 2005 01:00pm

Quote:

Originally posted by FrankHtown
If you, as the referee, judge it was a "try" and the "try" had not ended, score a 3, however, the thread said it was a pass, and if it went below the level of the rim, the "try" has ended, since the "try" was certainly unsuccessful. Therefore, it cannot still be a "try" for a 3.
Frank, the problem is that the language in 5-2-1 (FED) makes it irrelevant whether the ball is a try or not. It says "a successful try, tap or thrown ball" that doesn't touch a teammate, ref or the floor is 3 points if it starts from behind the arc. The thrown ball doesn't have to be a try.

In fact the whole point of introducing the wording was so that an "alley-oops" pass that went in would count for 3.

FrankHtown Tue Feb 22, 2005 01:03pm

Correct, Snaq, but once it is clear, the ball is not going in the basket, the "try" is over. So the try for the 3 has ended. It just turns into a live ball going into a basket. Look at 4.40.4 (b).

mopar60 Tue Feb 22, 2005 01:11pm

Ok, where do I send my request for an adjustment to the language used in the rulebook.

Better yet, let them just define "try" and "thrown ball" more clearly.

Whatcha think?

Otherwise, with my luck, in my very first game a kid launches the ball with all his might from half court at the buzzer, the ball's apex reaches a height level to the rim but the ball falls short hits and opponent in the back of the head as he is celebrating the 1 point overtime win and deflects up into the basket, I remember this thread and count it, right?

Golly!

mopar60 Tue Feb 22, 2005 01:16pm

4-40-4 (b)
 
Ah, excellent, problem solved, it is a 2, thank goodness for 4-40-4 (b). Great call!

Back under my rock!

Jerry Blum Tue Feb 22, 2005 01:23pm

The judgement was taken away for Federation ball a couple of years ago when they made the change dealing with the Ally-oop play. There is no judgement anymore.

I and most of the officials in my association thought that this wasn't exactly fair but the wording of the rule is that it should be a 3. Regardless of whether the thrown pass was judged to be a try or not.

Edited: 4-40-4 (b) doesn't matter because this was never judged to be a try. This is the "Thrown" ball part of the rule in the scoring section.

[Edited by Jerry Blum on Feb 22nd, 2005 at 01:26 PM]


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