![]() |
|
|
|||
2009-10 POEs explained
http://www.nfhs.org/core/contentmana...f_Emphasis.pdf
Plus some further comments on the two rule changes: Individual state associations will determine if the equipment will be used, at what tournament round(s) and by whom. During their pregame responsibilities, game officials should determine if red/LED lights are present in order to adjudicate end-of-period situations properly. And they even managed to mention rough play in two different POEs! Last edited by Nevadaref; Wed May 20, 2009 at 04:39am. |
|
|||
![]()
I'll start the comments with this.
Point #1 contains: "TRAVELING ... Guidelines for Teaching and Officiating ... D. A player may never take two steps while in possession of the ball." I have to disagree. A player who collects the ball while airborne, having both feet off the floor, can establish possession in the air and then land on one foot followed by the other. This is frequently seen with players driving to the basket. The player who is dribbling will jump into the air, end the dribble by grabbing the ball with both hands, and then take two steps by landing right, left or left, right and jump off that final foot to try for goal. The NFHS really messed up by publishing such a definitive and incorrect statement. ![]() Here is the text of the relevant NFHS rule: 4-44-2 . . . A player, who catches the ball while moving or dribbling, may stop, and establish a pivot foot as follows: a. If both feet are off the floor and the player lands: 1. Simultaneously on both feet, either foot may be the pivot. 2. On one foot followed by the other, the first foot to touch is the pivot. 3. ... It says right there that a player with the ball may take two steps! ![]() |
|
|||
Point #2 on closely-guarded is basically a reprint from 2004-05 with the addition of a section on using the markings on the court to help officials measure the required six-foot distance.
It seems that someone at the NFHS read a thread of ours from this past season and decided to steal information from a post that I made. Of course, no credit was given! ![]() ![]() "Good visual examples of this distance can be found on the court as: the distance between the free-throw line and the top of the semi-circle; from the division line to the jump circle; two adjacent marked lane spaces." Quote:
|
|
|||
Point #3
This explanation of part of the three second rule is NOT how most of us here have previously understood it. The prevailing opinion was not that the count stopped and then resumed, but rather that the player was simply not penalized for going over the allotted time during the course of making a move to the basket. If that move was stopped and a try did not take place, then he would be penalized. There was no need to resume or continue the count if a total of three seconds had already elapsed. Whoever wrote this has a different view. B. Exception. Allowance is made and the count is momentarily stopped when a restricted player has the ball and dribbles or makes a move to try for goal. However, the previous count is resumed if the player does not continue and try for goal. Some may feel that exception complicates the rule, but it is necessary in order to balance the offense and defense. The most obvious misinterpretation of this rule is when the restricted player has a two-second count when he or she begins the move to try for goal, but is stopped or the ball is batted loose. The player involved, while in the lane, attempts to regain possession and instead of continuing the count, the official erroneously stops it entirely. If the player starts a move to the basket and the ball is jarred loose, the previous count is resumed and results in a violation if it reaches three seconds. The purpose of the rule is circumvented if a violation is not called when this occurs. |
|
|||
Point #4 on Block/Charge is well-written.
I only have a small problem with the phrasing of one comment, because this directive can so easily be taken out of the specific context for which it was intended. "3) If a player with the ball gets his/her shoulders past the front of the torso of the defender and contact occurs, the defender has blocked and a foul must be called." We all know that isn't the case if defender is stationary and the offensive player initiates the contact. |
|
|||
Point #5 on FT administration makes it clear that the NFHS really did add a new requirement for the players in marked lane spaces and tried to pass it off as an editorial change, as we have previously stated on here.
"No player shall enter, leave or touch the court outside the marked lane space (3 feet by 3 feet)." ![]() |
|
|||
"B. Guarding a player with the Ball.
4) When an offensive player receives a long pass with his/her back turned and places one foot on the floor and crashes into a legally set defender, it is a player-control foul. It seems many officials are calling this a traveling violation, which is incorrect" I have two questions about this: 1) Is the "places one foot on the floor" part important? If the offensive player crashes into the legal defender while in the air is this a block because the defender didn't allow space? I assume not since above it says "Guarding a player with the ball... time and space are of no consequence". Maybe I'm reading too much into it. 2) I am having trouble understanding why they decided to mention that many officials seem to be calling this traveling. Depending on the situation this could be called a multitude of different ways. I wish they would have expanded on why it specifically isn't a traveling violation. By wording it this way I have more questions than answers. |
|
|||
While the wording and thinking may be differnet, it, in practice, results in excactly the same outcome.
__________________
Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Score the Basket!!!! ![]() |
|
|||
Quote:
4-10 Closely Guarded..... "The distance shall be measured from the forward foot/feet of the defender to the forward foot/feet of the ball handler." |
|
|||
Agreed, but I have seen others start a count based on this.
__________________
Score the Basket!!!! ![]() |
|
|||
Quote:
![]() |
|
|||
Quote:
A step is a raising of the foot off the floor followed by putting the foot back on the floor. |
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
A-hole formerly known as BNR |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Recent rules changes and POEs please | refboss | Basketball | 16 | Sun Nov 02, 2008 07:13am |
POEs for 06-07 season | lmeadski | Basketball | 2 | Mon Jul 17, 2006 07:24pm |
D3K Explained To A Coach - Letter One | whiskers_ump | Softball | 3 | Mon Apr 04, 2005 09:26am |
Travelling Explained | rgaudreau | Basketball | 2 | Sun Feb 13, 2005 08:41am |