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Another question...
Had my first youth game Saturday. Everything went pretty well. However, I had a lot of difficulty determining where to inbound the ball from on certain calls. I'm sure this sounds extremely amateur, but how do you determine the inbound spot on non-shooting fouls, walks, double dribbles etc., especially towards mid court?
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Does that make sense?
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First of all, your question does not sound amateurish. It would be amateurish if you didn't care where to inbound the ball. It shows attention to detail on your part to want to inbound the ball correctly. So don't sweat it if you don't know all the answers (even the "basic" ones) right away. Nobody ever has.
The general answer is that the ball is (almost) always put in play at the spot closest to where a foul or violation occurred. If the foul or violation occurs in the midcourt area (between the 3-point arc on either end of the court), then the ball is put in play on the sideline that is closer to where the foul or violation happened. Just make a straight line to the sideline and wherever the closest spot is, that's where the ball goes. Ok, now I don't know if I can describe this accurately, but picture the lane and the free throw circle. Now draw an imaginary line from each end of the free throw line to the corner where the endline meets the sideline. You should be envisioning a big trapezoid. If the foul or violation occurs in that trapezoid or in the free throw semi-circle, the ball is inbounded on the endline. If the foul or violation occurs outside that trapezoid, then the ball is inbounded on the sideline. (If you have an Officials' Manual, there will be a diagram in there showing this exact picture.) I hope that helps. If not, I'm sure somebody else will explain it better. |
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It's a trapezoid with a semi-circle stuck on the top. |
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So my "triangle" might leave out a small sliver of circle. Sheesh. When I hold the chart up on a far wall, and squint a lot, it kinda looks like a triangle...
Scrappy, you are right in telling tnsteele95 that asking these questions does show a willingness to learn some of the details. It still bugs me when officials take the ball out to a spot that isn't even close to the correct spot, just to avoid coming across the floor, for example. Most of the time it may not make a difference, but it can make a difference in a close game whether the ball gets taken out along an endline or sideline.
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I don't. Your trapezoid leaves out the entire FT semi-circle.
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