substitution question
exam question: A player who has been withdrawn may not re-enter before the next, opportunity to substitute after the ball becomes live following his/her replacement.
the correct answer ( per the exam) was false. rule 3-3-4 states "a player who has been replaced, or directed to leave the game shall not re-enter before the next opportunity to substitute after the clock has been started properly following his/her replacement." I remembered that once a player was replaced he couldn't come back in until after the clock started, but the question talks about the ball becoming live. If the correct answer is false, I assume the distinction is between the clock running vs becoming live. Another one that confused me was the following: A substitute who legally enters the game during a dead-ball period may not be withdrawn during that same dead-ball period. The correct answer was false. Following the logic of 3-3-3 and 4, a player is legal once he enters the court, and the player leaving becomes bench personnel. Is he not the "replaced" player and subject to the restrictions in 3-3-4? |
The first statement is false. Example: A1 comes out of the game before the first shot of a 1 & 1. He returns to the table. THe shot is made. He cannot re-enter, even though the ball becamse live, because the clock has not started.
The second statement is false. The statement says nothing about a replaced player. It's talking about the sub who went in. Yes, he can be replaced during the same dead ball players. Players can always come out. Coming in is the sticky part. |
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The "replaced player" is the one on the bench and is subject to the restrictions you mentioned. Any other player could come in and replace the last substitute to enter the game. |
so does this include a player with blood on their uniform? 3-6 says they must leave the game. Since this is directed by the official, then with the exception of a timeout they cannot return right away, correct?
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Once a sub enters the game, the replaced player cannot re-enter the game until time runs off the clock, under any circumstances. |
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Now, I would think the chances of a player being substituted for, and a 5th foul happening before the clock starting, would be very rare. But I would leave the player out and have them play with 4 until the 5th is elegible to come in. Remember, the team can play with 4 if there is no <B>eligible</B> substitute available. Now, if it's a lower-level grade school game, my whistle might blow inadvertantly right after the clock started, so the team with the ball gets it back, and the 5th player would be allowed back in. |
I still am unclear about a bleeding player. If a coach grabbed a shirt and the player threw it on can he stay in? If I tell the player about it, does that he mean he must stay out and a sub must come in? I read rule and case book and could not find this addressed, (whcih probably means it was right in front of me and I missed it). Thanks.
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That said, if you direct a player to leave the court for blood, he must leave, unless the coach buys him back in with a time out. If he buys him in, the player must be ready to go by the end of the time-out period. |
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