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Back In The Saddle Sun Mar 09, 2008 01:21am

Funky gym
 
I posted in another thread about my deep and abiding love for gyms with the table at the end. But there's one wreck league our association serves that plays in an old gym that has balconies that overhang on each end. They're low enough that they could easily interfere with throwing a long pass. So there's a red line striped about 3 feet inside the end line that serves as the OOB line during end line throw ins. They must only use this gym as a last resort, because it always takes a little explaining to the players, and sometimes even to my partner.

Of course I've read about this in the rules book. But until I had to deal with it, I had never really thought through the situation. Sure, the thrower can step up to the red line. But both offense and defense also have to stay behind it. And when there's a quick throw-in after a made basket, you will sometimes have players still across the red line when the throw-in is made. Not really an issue. Unless one of the defensive players begins to pressure the inbounds without remembering to back up behind the red line.

Then there's the issue of the throw-in ending and the location of the thrower. I blew this one when I was there earier this week. The thrower released the pass, and a defender swatted it away back across the red line, but not all the way out of bounds. I blew it dead.

But if instead the defender had swatted it back and it touched the thrower, who was still standing outside the red line, it would not be the normal OOB situation because the throw-in ended when the ball was legally touched. Therefore the boundary goes back to normal and the thrower is now standing in-bounds.

Could that be the basis for a trick play? Since the red line is only about a foot behind the backboard, if the throw-in were midway between the basket and the sideline, and the thrower threw it in to a teammate, who threw it right back to him, he would have a pretty makeable open shot without ever moving. Same if the thrower just bounced the ball off a defender. You could probably make that work once or twice, until the defense wised up and began to step "oob" to cover this player. :)

Adam Sun Mar 09, 2008 01:27am

Had a tight gym a couple of years ago with restraining lines (gave me flashbacks to my playing days in Smallsville, Iowa.) We called, I think, 4 offensive throwin violations for teammates of the thrower stepping between the relevant restraining line and the permanent OOB line. 2 went against the home team.

grunewar Mon Mar 10, 2008 08:41pm

Had a bizarre one tonight....... Boys MS game. Small gym. Very narrow sidelines where bleachers and table are. A1 administering throw in besides table and in front of bleachers. B1 applying pressure, jumping up and down and all. I signal B1 with my arm and say, "give him some room."

B1 stops jumping, turns his back on the inbounder, and walks down to the other end of the court. He didn't even cover the inbounder! :eek:

I was like - WOE! Never saw that before....Clock operator, who said he had been doing it for 33 yrs, said that was a first for him too. Certainly took us off guard.


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