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9-1-3d NHFS Editorial Change ? ? ?
Your seasoned consideration of this is appreciated . . .
Rule 9-1-3d. says, "No player shall enter or leave a marked lane space." In view of the wording stated in 9-1-3g, the "vertical plane" seems always to have been an important consideration in whether a lane-space violation occurs. That is, break the plane by putting a foot in the air over the free throw lane and a violation has occurred under the proper circumstances. But now the 2009-10 NFHS MAJOR EDITORIAL CHANGE on 9-1-3d makes this clarification: that "a player leaves a marked lane space when he or she contacts any part of the court outside the marked lane space (36 inches by 36 inches)." That seems to change the "vertical plane" stipulation to permit anything short of contact with the floor within the lane until, for instance, the ball strikes the rim. Does this '09-10 9-1-3d editorial change invalidate 9-1-3g? |
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The way I read it, it adds a further restriction. A player violates if they break the plane with their foot, or if they touch the floor in the lane with their hand.
Presumably, breaking the plane with the hand is still not a violation... |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Pushups ???
Has it always been the case? For the past twenty-eight years, if a player in a marked lane space lost his balance and did a "pushup" in the lane, without either of his feet crossing the lane line plane, I would have called the violation, but I'm not sure that previous rule wording would have backed me up on my call, not that anyone would have complained.
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"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” (Matthew 25:36) |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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Context?
I think it needs to be read in conjunction with the change to 9-1-3g requiring a foot "near" the outer edge of the lane line -- it prevents some giraffe from doing a split to get around the intent of the rule by sticking a foot near the line and the other foot in position to go around the occupant of the first spot from the outside
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Most HS games I have observed, the players are always breaking the plane before the ball hits, but you rarely see this being called unless it is extreme. How do you all call this? Thanks!
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It's only a violation if their feet break the plane, and I don't see this at the high school level. Even the girls are starting to get away from that stupid little (runon sentence alert)pirouette stance that technically breaks the rule but never gets called because it creates no advantage.
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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Cheers, mb |
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How do you call this?
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Unless you want to allow it the entire game, let it get worse, then call it in the last four minutes. Not a real good alternative. Last edited by Freddy; Thu Sep 10, 2009 at 04:10pm. |
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