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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 10:53am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M&M Guy View Post

My hangup is still the issue of player location vs. object location. Even though an official is a person like a player, under basketball rules the official is closer to an object. (I don't like being objectified, but I guess it comes with the territory.)
Let's move this to the division line.

Offense controlled ball hits Trail [straddling line] on frontcourt foot.
Where is the ball ?
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 11:09am
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Originally Posted by mick View Post
Let's move this to the division line.

Offense controlled ball hits Trail [straddling line] on frontcourt foot.
Where is the ball ?
Rolling around on the floor somewhere?

Same issue - is "player location", as defined in 4-35, the same as "official's location"?

What about a coach's location? Coach is straddling the sideline, and a pass hits his inbounds leg? Is the ball simply OOB because the other leg was OOB? Or is it a possible T because his leg is considered inbounds?
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 11:14am
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Originally Posted by M&M Guy View Post
Rolling around on the floor somewhere?

Same issue - is "player location", as defined in 4-35, the same as "official's location"?

What about a coach's location? Coach is straddling the sideline, and a pass hits his inbounds leg? Is the ball simply OOB because the other leg was OOB? Or is it a possible T because his leg is considered inbounds?
Two questions.
  1. Is the coach a person?
  2. Is the coach out of the box?
Your call.
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 11:39am
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Originally Posted by mick View Post
Two questions.
  1. Is the coach a person?
  2. Is the coach out of the box?
Your call.
I think we could do a whole new thread just on this question alone.

Just FYI - I'm leaning towards giving the official and the player the same status when it comes to inbounds/OOB, or frontcourt/backcourt status.

Unless someone convinces me otherwise.

(I used to be indecisive. But now I'm not so sure.)
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 11:49am
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Originally Posted by M&M Guy View Post
I think we could do a whole new thread just on this question alone.

Just FYI - I'm leaning towards giving the official and the player the same status when it comes to inbounds/OOB, or frontcourt/backcourt status.

Unless someone convinces me otherwise.

(I used to be indecisive. But now I'm not so sure.)
I'm leaning to getting the heck out of the way, or at least [unless the official is a sundial] he's lifting one foot in an attempt to escape in this unlikely situation.
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 11:50am
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Originally Posted by mick View Post
Is the coach a person?
From Wikipedia: There are also hypothetical persons, sentient non-human persons such as sentient extraterrestrial life and self aware machines.

I think coaches fall into this category.
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 12:27pm
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if the hitting the ref is the same as hitting the floor, you must look at where it hit the ref. forget about strandling the line. that is a distraction. the ball hit the floor inbounds because it hit the ref's body part that was inbounds.
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 02:21pm
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Originally Posted by ronald View Post
if the hitting the ref is the same as hitting the floor, you must look at where it hit the ref. forget about strandling the line. that is a distraction. the ball hit the floor inbounds because it hit the ref's body part that was inbounds.
I don't have books with me so correct me if I am wrong. 4-4-? lumps player and official together when determining ball location. Therefore, I am using the same criteria for player and official.

I think the case book uses the "same as touching the floor where the official is standing" reference. In your argument; is an official who's left foot is touching inbounds and who's right foot is not touching the floor but clearly outside the inbounds playing area still inbounds? What if the ball hits his right foot and caroms inbounds?

I do not believe an official can be inbounds and OOB or in the FC and the BC at the same time.
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Old Thu Mar 26, 2009, 04:06pm
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Originally Posted by Scratch85 View Post
I don't have books with me so correct me if I am wrong. 4-4-? lumps player and official together when determining ball location. Therefore, I am using the same criteria for player and official.

I think the case book uses the "same as touching the floor where the official is standing" reference.
4-4-4 is the rule. However, the wording is slightly different than what you remember, hence our discussion. "A ball which touches a player or an official is the same as the ball touching the floor at that individual's location." 4-35 covers player location, but does not specifically mention the location of an official. So, when the ball hits the official's leg that is inbounds, is "the ball touching the floor at that individual's location" inbounds?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scratch85 View Post
In your argument; is an official who's left foot is touching inbounds and who's right foot is not touching the floor but clearly outside the inbounds playing area still inbounds? What if the ball hits his right foot and caroms inbounds?
How would that be any different than hitting a player's foot/hand/torso/head in that same situation? Clearly still inbounds.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scratch85 View Post
I do not believe an official can be inbounds and OOB or in the FC and the BC at the same time.
Can you find the rule reference or case play to back that up? Again, that's the direction I'm leaning, but I wish someone could back up their argument with hard evidence one way or the other. If not, mick's suggetion is best: get out of the way so you don't have to make that decision!
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