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2.) The defender reached across the boundary plane prior to the release of the ball.
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Gwinnett Umpires Association Multicounty Softball Association Multicounty Basketball Officials Association |
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If the defender had waited until the ball had been released, then reached over and touched the ball, you would have nothing. |
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Same for throw-in with end line priveleges ?
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Upward ref |
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UNLESS It's an endline throw in after a made basket, and the thrower is passing the ball to a teammate who is also out of bounds. This is an automatic T. No warning required. |
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I hope that was clear. I just mean that the reaching that results in a technical for touching also counts as a DOG warning.
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Yom HaShoah |
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I think that's your answer. Violation of the throw-in plane. Since the violation occurs before the touching of the ball, no technical and issue a delay of game warning.
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There's no technical foul because the ball was released before the defense touched it. If, however, the defender reaches across and you cannot blow your whistle in time to prevent him from hitting the ball as its held by the thrower, it is a T even the first time. There's a case play (dang I hate leaving my book at work.)
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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Huh?
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This is the one play where you can ignore the fact that the ball was touched and simply issue a DOG warning. But, you're not really ignoring it, because it's not against the rules. Otherwise, as I explained in my post, you can't ignore the technical just because a violation happened before it. If you don't blow your whistle before the defense touches the ball, you have to call the T. The reasoning rufus gave would lead one to believe the following scenario should result in only a DOG warning: A1 with ball OOB for a throw-in. B1 reaches across and swings his arms. Official tells him to knock it off. B1 then slaps the ball. This is a T, regardless of whether a warning has been issued, and a warning is also issued if it has not been already.
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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I understand where you're going and appreciate the clarification. Would the fact that, in my post, I've already blown the ball dead before there is contact with the ball not have an impact on whether or not I call a T? In other words:
The example you provided almost fits mine above, but rather than saying knock it off I'd blow it dead and issue a DOG. If I didn't blow it dead due to the violation then yes, I agree you have to call the T there. Not trying to argue, just trying to get this right. Thanks. |
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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If it's separate acts ("reach through and then make another stab at and touch the ball") then it's a DOG violation (the first time), no matter how slow the whistle. |
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