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Welcome to the forum. |
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Please note that I very studiously ignored M&M in your other thread today--- the one where he brought up the clock starting while a throw-in was in the air and he wanted to move the ball up to center. The man has a mean streak in him, starting that one up again. |
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Let's get a little more specific:
A player has the ability to "run the baseline," throw the ball in from anywhere along the baseline, or make a pass to another team player out of bounds along the baseline if the other team has scored or been credited with a score by rule (i.e. goaltending/basket interference). The 5 second rule still applies. Every other throw in is what is called a designated spot throw in where the player can't really move (usually not more than a step in either direction). These include all throw ins that are not directly after a made or credited basket and obviously throw ins that are not on the baseline. Is the signal for designated spot throw in violations still two "finger points", for lack of a better description? |
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Signal 25 in the NFHS rulebook. Signal 30 in the NCAA rulebook. |
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So the answer is yes. |
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M&M's - The Official Candy of the Department of Redundancy Department. (Used with permission.) |
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