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Hi,
What is the rule regarding a player who has the ball out of bounds and a player from his own team steps out of bounds as the pass is made in, hence two players are out of bound from the same team on an inbounds pass. |
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If two players both went OOB to make a throw-in and one did not return, it would be a violation. PS - Are you from Maine? |
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Re: Am I not being clear on the information
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janes14, Perhaps the viewers are not sure of the call. Perhaps the viewers are not sure of the activity. Perhaps some of the viewers are assistant coaches. Are you asking: If a teammate of the thrower steps OOB after the Spot throw-in is released, is that a violation? This probably would not be called. Are you asking: If a teammate of the thrower steps OOB before the Spot throw-in is released, is that a violation? This should be called. Are you asking: If a teammate of the thrower steps OOB before/during/after the Endline throw-in is released, is that a violation? This should not be called. mick |
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My first post:
Passing the ball (on a throw-in) to a teammate who is also out of bounds is legal only after a made basket or made free throw. If the team can run the endline, then this passing out of bounds is legal.(NFHS Rule 7 Sec 5 Art 7) However, it is a violation if not inbounded within 5 seconds, as with any throw-in. If the thrown-in is from a spot, then this passing out of bounds would be a violation (as if he had moved from his designated spot). Hope this explains it adequately. |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by BktBallRef
[B] Quote:
I had two situations with this coming up this season. One time a kid ran out of bounds at the baseline to avoid defensive players in the key. We banged him with a T. I also had a game where a kid (defender) came up behind the dribbler and made a wild swipe hoping to dislodge the ball (made no contact) but lost control and ran OUT OF BOUNDS up the court for about 4 or 5 steps before coming back inbounds. I don't think he intentionally left the court, nor did his leaving create an advantage, however, as I said earlier, the rules don't really place those elemenets as a necessary condition. Thoughts?? |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Paul LeBoutillier
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The cases cited for a T for leaving the court: Sitch A: Stepping out to get the 3-second count stopped Sitch B: Going or staying OOB to make use of a screen (this seems to be your case that you cited above) Sitch C: A player remained at the bench during a time-out and then returned. These three situations all seem to show an implied intent by the player to "leave the court". I agree that intent has to be present. We aren't gonna T a player for diving OOB to save a ball are we? I guess we have to judge which is greater... intent or momentum. If momentum is the cause, I cannot call a technical foul. mick |
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My guess is, 9 out of 10 players don't even know this is a T, and correspondingly 10 out of 10 coaches would raise holy heck if you called it - but maybe that's where the fun lies ![]()
__________________
Dan R. |
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thanks
Hi I just want to thank-you for giving me some possible answers. BBALLREF, yes I am from Maine
![]() Mick, I do belong to another forum, but I did not ask the question on that forum nor did I respond as I did not understand the ruling. However I do appreciate getting the "official" information ![]() |
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Me? No T. |
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