Jump Ball to begin game. Ball goes up, White tips is towards the south (the basket they are attempting to score at). Ball bounds at 3 pt arc and is:
A) batted by white out of bounds at the baseline. B) batted by red out of bounds at the beseline. C) batted by both teams out of bounds at the baseline. For each: Your call and possesion arrow direction. |
A) batted by white out of bounds at the baseline.
Red's ball, white's arrow. B) batted by red out of bounds at the beseline. White's ball, red's arrow. C) batted by both teams out of bounds at the baseline. Jump ball between the two players that knocked the ball OOB. |
Right on as I see it.
In A and B the directional arrow has being put into play and changes on throw in . In C, no control yet. |
In situation A...
After the inbounder for red is handed the ball a foul is committed by red before the throw is completed. White gets the ball. Does red get the arrow? I guess it boils down to: When white knocks the ball out of bounds, does red have the arrow until the throw in is completed? |
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And the refs huddle quickly to brace themselves for a very physical/rough game. |
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To understand the concept of the replies, one must know that a bat of the ball doesn't change or establish possession. Holding or dribbling establishes possession. [see Rule 4-12-1] mick |
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The reason we don't need the arrow is because, although there was no team possession, one of the teams has in fact violated (ie., caused the ball to be out of bounds), so the ball goes to the other team. We <U>know</U> who gets the next possession. We use the arrow when we <U>don't know</U> who gets the next possession. ;) mick |
I think what's confusing you is
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