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Situation 10...
So, like Kelvin said, we wait to see the outcome of the basket to see if violation stands...Seems a little strange there...
Or, does A get the basket AND the ball back for the violation??? Thanks. Joe |
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SITUATION 10: A1 and A2 set a double screen near the end line. B3 intentionally goes out of bounds outside the end line to avoid being detained by A1 and A2. Just as B3 goes out of bounds, A3s try is in flight. RULING: B3 is called for a leaving-the-floor violation. Team A will receive the ball out of bounds at a spot nearest to where the violation occurred. Since the violation is on the defense, the ball does not become dead until the try has ended. If the try is successful, it will count. (9-3-2; 6-7-9 Exception d) The ruling is to call B3 for the violation and give the ball to A for a throw-in. If it goes, count it. It says nothing about ignoring it if the shot goes in.
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IMO, the "warning, then T" rule is (primarily) for the person guarding the inbounder. If it's another defensive player chasing a member of Team A other than the inbounder, I think the violation rule applies. |
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R9-2-11 is very specifically written up in the plural--i.e. "opponent(s)". I read that as covering all defensive players that go OOB during a throw-in, not just a defender contesting a throw-in. Iow, any defender going OOB during a throw-in leads to the team warning procedure instead of an immediate violation. As for the intent of the new rule, according to the "COMMENTS ON THE RULES REVISIONS" on p.72, it looks like the FED wants to stop players from leaving the court for an unauthorized reason during the course of play. The question seems to be.....does the "course of play" include all live ball situations or just live ball/clock running situations? If the FED had meant it to include all live ball situations, I think that they would have re-written 9-2-11 to reflect that. That's jmo though. Thoughts? |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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This makes the violation equal to a foul and pretty much the only violation that would do this... This is like calling BI or GT, scoring the basket, and then giving it back to A. what |
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I also think it's much ado about nothing. I don't recall passing on many Ts over the years because the offensive player went OOB, and I never remember the defensive player doing it in a manner to get noticed. NCAA has had a similar rule, and there haven't been any controversies (that I am aware of) regarding the defensive player. |
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That's kin of scary though
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On the play in question, what about if a player is forced OOB, does that count the same - should not, but I don't see that covered in the rule. Or did I miss it? Thanks David |
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Re: That's kin of scary though
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On the play in question, what about if a player is forced OOB, does that count the same - should not, but I don't see that covered in the rule. Or did I miss it? [/B][/QUOTE]If a player is forced out of bounds, you got nuthin'-- unless he delays returning inbounds. The new rule- R9-3-2- sez that a player can't leave the floor for an "unauthorized" reason. Going OOB because you're forced out isn't an "unauthorized" reason. Ergo, this rule doesn't apply to a force-out. Similary, R10-3-3 sez it's a T if you delay returning inbounds after legally being OOB. Iow, this rule doesn't apply on a force-out either if the player forced out comes right back in. |
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