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Rule 9-7 A player shall not remain for three seconds in that part of his/her free-throw lane between the end line and the farther edge of the free-throw line while the ball is in control of his/her team in his/her frontcourt. No other allowance that I am aware of. |
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Rule 4-something (somewhere in the "t" section
![]() So, technically, yes it can be called although I'm wondering what the practical application of the rule is by most people. After the whole pre-game dunk T convo I'm scared to find out!!! |
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Three second restrictions remain in effect during an interrupted dribble (9-7): This rule change deletes the requirement for the three-second count to be terminated during an interrupted dribble. By rule, team control remains in effect during an interrupted dribble, therefore the three-second restrictions should still apply. Also, by definition, an interrupted dribble occurs when the ball is "loose." Team control continues (as does the three-second restriction) during a loose ball. Therefore, the rules applying to a loose ball and an interrupted dribble should be the same. The sentence in the 2001-02 book which was deleted was "The count shall not begin or it shall be terminated during an interrupted dribble." If you weren't officiating back then there is no way that you could know this from looking at the current rules book. |
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The three-second change is listed under 2002. |
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From Nevadaref: "2002-03 rule change. Three second restrictions remain in effect during an interrupted dribble (9-7): This rule change deletes the requirement for the three-second count to be terminated during an interrupted dribble. By rule, team control remains in effect during an interrupted dribble, therefore the three-second restrictions should still apply. Also, by definition, an interrupted dribble occurs when the ball is "loose." Team control continues (as does the three-second restriction) during a loose ball. Therefore, the rules applying to a loose ball and an interrupted dribble should be the same."
From Splute: "Advantage / disadvantage" I certainly understand Splute's point about advantage/disadvantage, from a realistic officiating viewpoint, but this question came up in a strictly "by the book" new member training session. Our training committee has one purpose at this time, to get the new members to pass the rules test, "by the book", in a few weeks. After that, another committee prepares them for officiating in the real world. Nevadaref: Thanks for your reply. I knew that the answer was somewhere, I remember it being discussed a few years ago, but I couldn't find it in the book anywhere. Now I know why I couldn't find it, but I don't understand why the NFHS would not continue to have this in the rule book or case book. I agree with you, "If you weren't officiating back then there is no way that you could know this from looking at the current rules book.' |
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This is probably the best current rule reference. ![]() |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
interrupted dribble | Dbyb | Basketball | 3 | Wed Feb 09, 2005 10:19am |
Interrupted dribble | MPLAHE | Basketball | 2 | Sat Feb 05, 2005 02:40pm |
3 Sec During Interrupted Dribble | chayce | Basketball | 1 | Fri Dec 12, 2003 12:17pm |
3 seconds on interrupted dribble? | just another ref | Basketball | 11 | Thu Nov 13, 2003 06:11pm |
Interrupted dribble | force39 | Basketball | 10 | Wed Mar 12, 2003 03:20pm |