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There are only 2 ways for the alternating possession arrow to change direction.
1) The completion of an alternating possession throw-in; 2) A throw-in violation during an alternating possession throw-in. Neither of these things happened in your situation. (The technical foul is a foul, obviously, so #2 doesn't apply.) Therefore, Team B will receive 2 shots and the ball, but A retains the arrow. Hope that helps. Chuck |
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ChuckElias, you read more into his post then i did. So, i'm not sure if he is asking about AP throwin. To answer the question, Yes, they loose the throwin because the T is a 2 shot foul and the ball at half court. HS Rules.
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foulbuster |
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This came up in our area meeting last night. When do you switch (or have it switched) the arrow on an AP throw-in? I was under the impression it was "when the throw-in ends". I was told by everyone else at the meeting that it should be switched when "the ball is at the disposal of the thrower". Hasn't made any difference yet, but I have been actually making sure the table doesn't switch the arrow too early.
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ChuckElias had it right for the AP; the arrow is not switched until the throw-in ends either by being completed, or by a throw-in violation (only the thrower's team can have a THROW-IN VIOLATION).
[Edited by Slider on Jan 28th, 2002 at 09:54 AM] |
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The original play doesn't say anything about an AP throw-in.
If only one technical foul is called, the team shooting FTs will always get the ball OOB at the division line, no matter who had the ball previously.
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"...as cool as the other side of the pillow." - Stuart Scott "You should never be proud of doing the right thing." - Dean Smith |
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Yom HaShoah |
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NOTHING in basketball pisses me off more than scorers/timers who do this. The worst are the ones who switch the arrow before you even give the ball to the inbounder.
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"To win the game is great. To play the game is greater. But to love the game is the greatest of all." |
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So, new assumption. Assume it's NOT an AP throw-in. Then in a HS game, the answer to the original question is yes. Possession is part of the penalty for a technical foul. If Team A has the ball for a throw-in and A2 receives a T, then Team B will get 2 shots and the ball; so Team A obviously "loses the throw-in" too. In college, the answer is no (usually). Team B would shoot 2 free throws, but then the game would resume with Team A's throw-in. (There are exceptions for intentional or flagrant T's and in women's ball there is an exception for calling an excessive TO.) I hope I've redeemed myself. (RevRef, that was a metaphorical comment, not a theological one ) Chuck |
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Not even a howler monkey who throws a cup of ice on the floor because he didn't like a call? Not even a player who intentionally elbows an opponent in the throat? BTW - all of these happened in my games this past weekend. I would gladly have traded any of them for a scorer who didn't know how to change the arrow. Sorry - didn't mean it as a put-down, only as a vent on my part.
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Yom HaShoah |
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I guess it's just a personal pet peeve because of the fact that I have (correctly) worked the arrow for five straight years. (Well, okay, my first game I thought the arrow switched every time the ball changed posession . . .)
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"To win the game is great. To play the game is greater. But to love the game is the greatest of all." |
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Seriously, I'm glad it was you and not me. I spent the weekend lounging around the balmy shores of Rockaway Beach. (That's Oregon, folks) It was very nice to skip the weekend howler monkey antics. |
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