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After a made basket, the team inbounding the ball can have A1 pick up the ball, pass to A2 who is also OOB, and resume the throw-in.
Can this also be done on an in-bounds play that doesn't follow a made basket? What are some rules about this situation, I'm not real clear on the provisions. |
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You can also do it on an "awarded" basket. Note that this includes made or awarded free throws also.
You can't do it on any "spot" throw-ins. The team throwing the ball in can have any number of players OOB at the same time. The only restriction is that you have 5 seconds to release the ball directly towards the court. |
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After an awarded basket by B, A can run the baseline, which includes having multiple players out of bounds along the end line. During A's 5 second count, they can pass between teammates who are oob along the end line, dribble, do whatever as long as they release the ball for an inbounds throw-in before the 5 second count is up.
If B violates during the throw-in (such as kicking the throw-in pass, A retains the "run the baseline" privilege if the inbounds spot is along the baseline. If the violation is up court, then the throw-in would be a designated spot nearest the violation. If A or B call a time out following a basket, A retains the "run the baseline" privilege following the time out. If B fouls A during the throw-in, a designated spot throw-in would follow if A is not in the bonus.
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I only wanna know ... |
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ART. 7 . . . After a goal or awarded goal as in 7-4-3, 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 end line. A team retains this privilege if the scoring team commits a violation or common foul (before the bonus is in effect) and the ensuing throw-in spot would have been on the end line. Any player of the team may make a direct throw-in or he/she may pass the ball along the end line to a teammate(s) outside the boundary line. |
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When do restrictions on team B end?
Meaning when can B1 reach for the ball? After it crosses the end line or can B1 steal (or attempt to steal) the pass from A1 to A2, both of whom are OOB. |
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NOTE: The thrower may penetrate the plane provided he/she does not touch the inbounds area before the ball is released on the throw-in pass. The opponent in this situation may legally touch or grasp the ball. Rule 9, Section 2, Penalty #3 If an opponent(s) of the thrower reaches through the throw-in boundary-line plane and touches or dislodges the ball while in possession of the thrower or being passed to a teammate outside the boundary line (as in 7-5-7), a technical foul shall be charged to the offender. No warning for delay required. See 10-3-11 Penalty. |
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Re: College is different
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Quitters never win, winners never quit, but those who never win AND never quit are idiots. |
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Informal poll please...exactly how many of you would call a T if B1 tipped the ball so it remains OOB after A1 passed to A2 who is also behind the baseline after a made basket?
Unless it's glaring, then I'm simply going to call an OOB infraction on B and award the ball back to A. The only catch is that A's throw-in now becomes a "spot" throw-in and you may have given Team B an advantage. Just thought I'd throw this out there... |
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I'd call the T. It's the right call. I don't believe in (a)making up my own rules (b)giving a team an advantage they don't deserve or (c)not being able to explain to an observer/evaluator(or a coach for that matter) why I didn't have the sack to make the right call. Jmo. |
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But calling it OOB and giving A a spot throw-in is penalizing them at least twice. You killed their surprise play (or at least, unorthodox), you didn't give 2 FTs that they deserved, and then you force them into a spot throw-in. No thanks.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Sorry, let me rephrase my question. I'm not looking for those glaring ones...moreso the ones where the ball is on the imaginary plane OOB, but being passed to A2.
I agree that if B1 lunges into the OOB area to deflect the pass that I'm going to call a T. That's an easy one. |
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