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Travel
Last night had a girl pick up her dribble and make a pass. The girl she was passing to looked away and cut just before the pass. The passer then retreived her own pass but did not dribble again - she simply went and picked it up. I thought this was similar to a fumble and she was allowed to pick up her pass. What is the ruling and where is this covered in rule book or case book?
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Pope Francis |
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Quote:
2nd) I am pretty sure it is a illegal dribble violation. More specifically, it is an illegal start of a dribble. From the book of Jurassic - Quote:
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- SamIAm (Senior Registered User) - (Concerning all judgement calls - they depend on age, ability, and severity) Last edited by SamIAm; Thu Mar 05, 2009 at 08:42am. |
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I saw that answer prior
Thanks but I am not sure about this. What is the difference between this and a fumble? What if in the attempted pass the player tries to hold back and the balls kind of slips out and the player retreives it. It all seems similar to a fumble to me.
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Concerning the second question. If is was a fumble, A1 can go get her fumble, but not dribble. The difference between a fumble and an errant pass is your judgement. My take on the difference is, "a fumble is accidental release of the ball", a pass is "intentional release of the ball". (These descriptions are intended to only apply to the question of was it a pass or was it a fumble.) Someone in the past has posted a rule of thumb that goes something like this - You can fumble, dribble, fumble but you cannot dribble, fumble, dribble.
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- SamIAm (Senior Registered User) - (Concerning all judgement calls - they depend on age, ability, and severity) Last edited by SamIAm; Thu Mar 05, 2009 at 09:52am. |
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I agree with Sam (and Jurassic Ref in abstentia). Your player ended a dribble and threw the ball to the floor [started a second dribble] and grabbed the ball [ended a second dribble]. Intent to pass has nothing to do with this action. Just consider the act on its own merit. For guidance, consider Case 4.15.4 Situation C (a) and (b), where throwing a ball against player's own backboard or against an official is compared to throwing the ball against the floor. Yes, your player may recover a fumble, but from what you described your player got away with an illegal dribble. |
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Your judgement as an official.
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A-hole formerly known as BNR |
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Case play for NCAA Womens Case book
Here is an case play in support of your OP:
A.R. 84. A1, after: (1) Receiving a pass; or (2) Ending his/her dribble, passes the ball to A2. Before receiving the pass, A2 leaves the area on a cut to the basket. A1 goes to the area vacated by A2 and recovers the ball. RULING: In order for a pass to occur, the thrown ball must be touched by another player. This did not occur in (1) or (2). (1) A1’s attempted pass was the start of his/her dribble. When he/ she recovered the ball and started another dribble, he/she would have committed a violation. (Had A1, after releasing the pass, which was the start of the dribble, not recovered the ball but rather continued to dribble, it would not have been a violation.) (2) A1 had previously ended a dribble before his/her attempted pass to A2. A1’s release of the ball on his/her attempted pass to A2 was the start of a second dribble. When A1 recovered the ball he/she ended the dribble. A1 committed a violation after he/she touched the ball. (Rule 4-21.2 and 9-7.1.c) Hope this helps. |
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