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It is either a foul on B, because the contact did disadvantage A, or you expand 10-6-1 to cover this situation and penalize the player that DID cause the ball to go OOB. |
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A is the last to touch the ball. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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There is no way I can logically accept giving the ball to the player who's contact caused the ball to go OOB. I seriously doubt the intent of the rule is for B to be rewarded for causing the ball to go out. |
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Also, the rule does not say the hand is part of the ball. That's a poor way of putting it, that can get us in trouble. Absent a rule, interp, or ruling that says B caused the ball to go OOB, the ball is off A. B's ball. But my guess is that B1 did not hit the hand without also touching the ball. |
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Your logic is neither mine nor in the rule book. 10-6-1 just says that if B1 contacts A1's hand while it is in contact with the ball it is NOT a foul but only if it was incidental to an attempt to play the ball. 10-6-1: He/she shall not contact an opponent with his/her hand unless such contact is only with the opponent's hand while it is on the ball AND is incidental to an attempt to play the ball. It does not say hand is part of the ball. It does not say that if B1 contacts A1's hand while it is in contact with the ball, that B1 is considered to have contacted the ball. It does not say that you can NEVER have a foul if the contact is only on the opponent's hand while in contact with the ball. The contact is ignored ONLY if INCIDENTAAL. Incidental only means the official deemed the contact to be of so little importance that it had no effect or did not hinder an opponent from performing normal actions. If you judge that B1 contact put A1 at a disadvantage because the contact prohibited A1 from properly gaining possession of the ball then call the foul. You have rule support to do so. If you judge B1's contact to be incidental and ball goes OB the give the ball to B because B DID NOT touch the ball, A did. You have rule support to do so. If you try to say that even though B did not touch the ball pe se but because he touched A's hand while it was on the ball then B is deemed to have touched the ball then this is faulty logic. You do not have rule support for this. [Edited by Daryl H. Long on Mar 24th, 2005 at 11:51 PM] |
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B's contact on A's hand was incidental to playing the ball, I think 10-6-1 supports no foul AND giving the ball to A. |
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BZ
You obviously did not read my post and don't put words in my mouth that I did not say. I agree with you on some things and disagree on others so read this posst and my previous post carefully before replying. I quoted the rule exactly. The reason I brought it up is if you go back and read some of the comments they seemed to say that if contact was on hand on the ball a foul NEVER can be called, which is simply not true. The criteria I cited for no foul is two-fold: 1. contact on hand while opponent's hand is on the ball. AND 2. Incidental. If both are not met call the foul. It can be personal, intentional, etc. (Give me rule support for ONLY intentional) If both are met then ignore. I agree with you that given the facts from the original post that the contact should be ruled incidental therefore by applying 10-6-1 no foul can be called. Incidental is also defined in Rule 4-27 specifically Articles 2 and 3 which apply more closely to this case. But I disagree with you on who will get the ball. I say B will get the ball and cite Rule 7-2 as my support. The individual player who causes the ball to go out of bounds is the one who last TOUCHED or was TOUCHED by the ball. In any case if B1's hand never come into contact with the ball then he DID NOT TOUCH IT. If he did not touch it then he could not have caused the ball to go out of bounds. I am open to your suggestion to the contrary but only if you can come up with specific wording in the rule book, case book, or other NFHS publication to support your position. [Edited by Daryl H. Long on Mar 25th, 2005 at 12:49 AM] |
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