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Im not sure that explains what Im looking for...
Art 2: Play shall be resumed by one of the following methods: b. A free throw or a throw-in when the interruption occurred during this activity or if a team is entitled to such. It wasnt a free throw so that means its a throw in, but do we go to the arrow?~ Last edited by hugheske44; Mon Dec 07, 2009 at 09:50pm. |
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So I just looked in the Rules by Topic book and under Throw-Ins (topic 6)
Alternate-possession throw ins shall be from the out-of-bounds spot nearest to where the ball was located. An alternating-possesion throw-in shall result: Double personal, double technical or simultaneous fouls occur and the point of interruption is such that neither team is in control and no goal, infraction, nor end of quarter/extra period is involved (6-4-3a-g;7-3). Since during a throw in, the rule clearly states there is no team control, then why wouldnt we go to the arrow? Is 'such that neither team is in control' and 'no team control' the same thing? I think thats where Im splitting hairs. I am sorry to be a pain but I am a trainer with an association and I know most of the people are under the assumption we go to alternate-possesion, I need to be very clear in explaining the correct way. ~~ |
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The Rules by Topic book is a new concept that the NFHS started in 2006-07.
Consequently there are still some kinks in it which need to be worked out. The first year that it was published it was riddled with errors. So I'm not a big fan of this book. However, in your case, rather than an outright error, I believe that you are just not taking what is written in the proper context. You are reading the section under "Topic: Alternating Possession" so all of the accompanying text assumes that the situation is one for which it is proper to award an alternating possession throw-in. You need to move forward in the book to "Topic: Point of Interruption" and read what it says there. It clearly states, "When point of interruption is required, play shall be resumed by...a free throw or a throw-in when the point of interruption occurred during this activity or if a team is entitled to such..." |
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Perhaps your explanation can be made clearer by breaking down POI like this: The POI definition (NFHS 4-36-2) tells us how to resume play in three specific situations. Situation 1: The ball is live and clearly in team control. Play is resumed by giving the ball back to the team in control for a throw-in at the spot nearest where the ball was when the interruption occurred. Situation 2: The ball is dead and we were about to make it live in one of the three possible ways (NFHS 6-1-1): a free throw, a throw-in or a *jump ball; or the ball had just become live via one of those three methods (NFHS 6-1-2), but the activity was interrupted before it ended (NFHS 4-20-3, 4-42-5, 4-28-3 respectively); or something just happened during play and by rule the next activity is a free throw or throw-in (e.g., foul, violation, made basket). Play is resumed by returning to that activity (free throw, throw-in or jump ball). Situation 3: The Last Resort. The only-when-all-else-fails case. We are not in either Situation 1 or 2. There is no goal, infraction nor end of quarter/extra period is involved (other rules tell us how to resume play from those situations). Normally this happens when the ball is live, play is going on, but no team is in control. Play is resumed by an alternating-possession throw-in. *I added the jump ball to this situation both to make it tie more naturally to NFHS 6-1-1, and also because it has obviously and clearly been accidentally omitted from 4-36-2. If the game is interrupted before or during a jump ball and the specified way to resume play is to return to the point of interruption, you have to return to the jump ball. There is no team control and therefore you cannot have a regular throw-in. The AP arrow has not been established and you cannot have an AP throw-in. You either jump it up, or you turn off the lights and go home. Unless you are BillyMac, in which case you flip a coin ![]()
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming Last edited by Back In The Saddle; Tue Dec 08, 2009 at 03:13am. |
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![]() So isn't the procedure exactly the same? ![]() |
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The problem here is that too many officials get one aspect of the pre-POI inadvertent whistle rule (as I remember it) mixed up with POI. So when it's a throw-in that gets interrupted, they immediately respond with "no team control, go to the arrow." At least that's the only reason I can come up with why folks blow right past 4-36-2b in their zeal to get right to the darned arrow.
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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Someday, Over The Rainbow ...
By rule, I'm not allowed to do this at this point in time, but, someday ...
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__________________
"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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One of those last three items had to be involved, or there wouldn't be a throw-in. Since one of those items was involved, the condition isn't met and the resulting action (AP throw in) isn't followed. Just go to the POI rule, and follow the methods in order: a) If there was team control, give it back to the team in control. b) If there was no team control, but it was during a FT or throw-in, or during a try which results in a throw-in, go back to the FT or throw-in. c) If neither a nor b, then go to the arrow. |
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I recently had a MS coaching friend of mine ask me about POI vs AP. His understanding of each was that they were simply two different methods of putting the ball in play. And the only way to determine which to use was to memorize, by rule, when to use each.
He was wrong and I think my explanation helped him understand it. I hope I use the correct words and can convey that idea here. There are certain situations that will always be AP because the POI will always give us an AP situation. They are listed in 6-4-3(a,b,c and f). In 6-4-3(d,e,and g) we are given the situations that may or may not have an obvious POI to put the ball back in play. The situations that give us an obvious POI in (d) are when there is a FT to follow (as in multiple FT's) and when there is Throw-in to follow the attempt (as in a techincal FT). The situations that give us an obvious POI in (e & g) are a goal, an infraction, the end of a quarter/extra period. If none of these exist we go to AP. So to sum it up, we would always go POI if it were possible. It is not so we we have to go AP sometimes and the criteria for that is spelled out in 6-4-3. I'm sure there are holes in my explanation. But basically, AP only exists to put the ball in play to start 2nd, 3rd and 4th quarters and to put the ball in play when there isn't an obvious POI as described in 6-4-3. Now, let the hole poking begin! |
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